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Handley Page Victor

The Handley Page Victor is a British jet-powered strategic bomber developed and produced by Handley Page during the Cold War. It was the third and final V bomber to be operated by the Royal Air Force (RAF), the other two being the Vickers Valiant and the Avro Vulcan. Entering service in 1958, the Victor was initially developed as part of the United Kingdom's airborne nuclear deterrent, but it was retired from the nuclear mission in 1968, following the discovery of fatigue cracks which had been exacerbated by the RAF's adoption of a low-altitude flight profile to avoid interception, and due to the pending introduction of the Royal Navy's submarine-launched Polaris missiles in 1969.

HP.80 Victor
Handley Page HP-80 Victor K2 after landing, with drag parachute deployed
Role Strategic bomber or aerial refueling tanker aircraft
National origin United Kingdom
Manufacturer Handley Page Limited
First flight 24 December 1952
Introduction April 1958
Retired 15 October 1993
Status Retired
Primary user Royal Air Force
Produced 1952–1963
Number built 86

With the nuclear deterrent mission relinquished to the Royal Navy a large V-bomber fleet could not be justified. A number of Victors were modified for strategic reconnaissance, using a combination of radar, cameras, and other sensors. Prior to the introduction of Polaris, some had already been converted into tankers to replace Valiants; further conversions to tankers followed and some of these re-purposed Victors refuelled Vulcan bombers during the Black Buck raids of the Falklands War.

Remaining in the air refueling role, the Victor was the last of the V-bombers to be retired from service on 15 October 1993. In its refueling role the Victor was replaced by the Vickers VC10 and the Lockheed Tristar.

Development edit

Origins edit

 
Painting of test Victor B1 XA918 by artist and former Handley Page employee Peter Coombs

The origin of the Victor and the other V bombers is heavily linked with the early British atomic weapons programme and nuclear deterrent policies that were developed in the aftermath of the Second World War. The atom bomb programme formally began with Air Staff Operational Requirement OR.1001 issued in August 1946, which anticipated a government decision in January 1947 to authorise research and development work on atomic weapons; the U.S. Atomic Energy Act of 1946 (McMahon Act) prohibited exporting atomic knowledge, even to countries that had collaborated on the Manhattan Project.[1] OR.1001 envisaged a weapon not to exceed 24 ft 2 in (7.37 m) in length, 5 ft (1.5 m) in diameter, 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) in weight, and suitable for release from 20,000 ft (6,100 m) to 50,000 ft (15,000 m).[2]

At the same time, the Air Ministry drew up requirements for bombers to replace the existing piston-engined heavy bombers such as the Avro Lancaster and the new Avro Lincoln which equipped RAF Bomber Command.[N 1] In January 1947, the Ministry of Supply distributed Specification B.35/46 to aviation companies to satisfy Air Staff Operational Requirement OR.229 for "a medium range bomber landplane capable of carrying one 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) bomb to a target 1,500 nautical miles (1,700 mi; 2,800 km) from a base which may be anywhere in the world." A cruising speed of 500 knots (580 mph; 930 km/h) at heights between 35,000 ft (11,000 m) and 50,000 ft (15,000 m) was specified. The maximum weight when fully loaded ought not to exceed 100,000 lb (45,000 kg). The weapons load was to include a 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) "Special gravity bomb" (i.e. a free-fall nuclear weapon), or over shorter ranges 20,000 lb (9,100 kg) of conventional bombs. No defensive weapons were to be carried, the aircraft relying on its speed and altitude to avoid opposing fighters.[4]

The similar OR.230 required a "long range bomber" with a 2,000 nautical miles (2,300 mi; 3,700 km) radius of action at a height of 50,000 ft (15,000 m), a cruise speed of 575 mph (925 km/h), and a maximum weight of 200,000 lb (91,000 kg) when fully loaded.[5] Responses to OR.230 were received from Short Brothers, Bristol, and Handley Page; however, the Air Ministry recognised that developing an aircraft to meet these stringent requirements would have been technically demanding and so expensive that the resulting bomber could be purchased only in small numbers.[6] As a result, realising that the majority of likely targets would not require such a long range, a less demanding specification for a medium-range bomber, Air Ministry Specification B.35/46 was issued. This demanded the ability to carry the same 10,000 lb bomb-load to a target 1,500 nautical miles (1,700 mi; 2,800 km) away at a height of 45,000–50,000 ft (14,000–15,000 m) at a speed of 575 mph (925 km/h).[4]

HP.80 edit

The design proposed by Handley Page in response to B.35/46 was given the internal designation of HP.80. To achieve the required performance, Handley Page's aerodynamicist Dr. Gustav Lachmann and his deputy, Godfrey Lee developed a crescent-shaped swept wing for the HP.80.[7] Aviation author Bill Gunston described the Victor's compound-sweep crescent wing as having been "undoubtedly the most efficient high-subsonic wing on any drawing board in 1947".[8] The sweep and chord of the wing decreased in three distinct steps from the root to the tip, to ensure a constant critical Mach number across the entire wing and consequently a high cruise speed.[9] The other parts of the aircraft which accelerate the flow, the nose and tail, were also designed for the same critical mach number so the shape of the HP.80 had a constant critical mach number all over.[8] Early work on the project included tailless aircraft designs, which would have used wing-tip vertical surfaces instead; however as the proposal matured, a high-mounted, full tailplane was adopted instead.[10] The profile and shaping of the crescent wing was subject to considerable fine-tuning and alterations throughout the early development stages, particularly to counter unfavourable pitching behaviour in flight.[11]

The HP.80 and Avro's Type 698 were chosen as the best two of the proposed designs to B.35/46, and orders for two prototypes of each were placed.[12] It was recognised, however, that there were many unknowns associated with both designs, and an order was also placed for Vickers' design, which became the Valiant. Although not fully meeting the requirements of the specification, the Valiant design posed little risk of failure and could therefore reach service earlier.[13] The HP.80's crescent wing was tested on a ⅓-scale glider, the HP.87, and a heavily modified Supermarine Attacker, which was given the Handley Page HP.88 designation. The HP.88 crashed on 26 August 1951 after completing only about thirty flights and little useful data was gained during its brief two months of existence. By the time the HP.88 was ready, the HP.80 wing had changed such that the former was no longer representative. The design of the HP.80 had sufficiently advanced that the loss of the HP.88 had little effect on the programme.[14]

Two HP.80 prototypes, WB771 and WB775, were built. WB771 had been partially assembled at the Handley Page factory at Radlett airfield when the Ministry of Supply decided the runway was too short for the first flight.[15] The aircraft parts were transported by road to RAF Boscombe Down where they were assembled for the first flight; bulldozers were used to clear the route and create paths around obstacles. Sections of the aircraft were hidden under wooden framing and tarpaulins printed with "GELEYPANDHY / SOUTHAMPTON" to make it appear as a boat hull in transit. GELEYPANDHY was an anagram of "Handley Pyge", marred by a signwriter's error.[16] On 24 December 1952, piloted by Handley Page's chief test pilot Hedley Hazelden, WB771 made its maiden flight, which lasted for a total of 17 minutes.[17][18] Ten days later, the Air Ministry announced the aircraft's official name to be Victor.[19][N 2]

The prototypes performed well; however, design failings led to the loss of WB771 on 14 July 1954, when the tailplane detached whilst making a low-level pass over the runway at Cranfield, causing the aircraft to crash with the loss of the crew. Attached to the fin using three bolts, the tailplane was subjected to considerably more load than had been anticipated, causing fatigue cracking around the bolt holes. This led to the bolts loosening and failing in shear. Stress concentrations around the holes were reduced by adding a fourth bolt.[20] The potential for flutter due to shortcomings in the design of the fin/tailplane joint was also reduced by shortening the fin.[21][22] Additionally, the prototypes were tail heavy due to the lack of equipment in the nose; this was remedied by adding large ballast weights to the prototypes.[23] Production Victors had a lengthened nose to move the crew escape door further from the engine intakes as the original position was considered too dangerous as an emergency exit in flight. The lengthened nose also improved the center of gravity range.[24]

Victor B.1 edit

 
Victor B1A XH588 at an East Anglian Battle of Britain day event, 1959

Production B.1 Victors were powered by the Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire ASSa.7 turbojets rated at 11,000 lbf (49 kN), and were initially armed with the Blue Danube nuclear weapon and later with the more powerful Yellow Sun weapon when it became available. Victors also carried U.S.-owned Mark 5 nuclear bombs (made available under the Project E programme) and the British Red Beard tactical nuclear weapon.[25][26][27] A total of 24 were upgraded to B.1A standard by the addition of Red Steer tail warning radar in an enlarged tail-cone and a suite of radar warning receivers and electronic countermeasures (ECM) from 1958 to 1960.[28][29]

On 1 June 1956, a production Victor XA917 flown by test pilot Johnny Allam inadvertently exceeded the speed of sound after Allam let the nose drop slightly at a high power setting. Allam noticed a cockpit indication of Mach 1.1 and ground observers from Watford to Banbury reported hearing a sonic boom. The Victor maintained stability throughout the event. Aviation author Andrew Brookes has claimed that Allam broke the sound barrier knowingly to demonstrate the Victor's higher speed capability compared to the earlier V-bombers.[30][N 3] The Victor was the largest aircraft to have broken the sound barrier at that time.[31]

Victor B.2 edit

 
Victor B.2 at RAF Wittering undergoing pre-flight preparations

The RAF required its bombers to be capable of higher operational ceilings, and numerous proposals were considered for improved Victors. Initially, Handley Page proposed using 14,000 lbf (62 kN) Sapphire 9 engines to produce a "Phase 2" bomber, to be followed by "Phase 3" Victors with the wingspan increased to 137 ft (42 m) and powered by Bristol Siddeley Olympus turbojets or Rolls-Royce Conway turbofans. The Sapphire 9 was cancelled and the heavily modified Phase 3 aircraft would have delayed introduction, so an interim "Phase 2A" Victor was proposed and accepted, to be powered by the Conway but with minimal modifications.[32][33]

The "Phase 2A" proposal became the Victor B.2, with Conway RCo.11 engines providing 17,250 lbf (76.7 kN), which required enlarged intakes to increase the airflow to the engines, and the wingspan was increased to 120 ft (37 m).[34] The B.2 also added a pair of retractable "elephant ear" intakes on the upper rear fuselage forward of the fin, to feed air to Ram Air Turbines (RAT) to provide electricity should an in-flight engine failure occur.[35][36]

The first flight of the Victor B.2 prototype , serial number XH668 was made on 20 February 1959,[37] and it had flown 100 hours by 20 August 1959, when it disappeared from radar, crashing into the sea off the Pembrokeshire coast during high-altitude engine tests carried out by the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE). Most of the wreckage had been recovered by November 1960, following an extensive search and recovery operation. The accident investigation concluded that the starboard pitot head had failed, causing the flight control system to force the aircraft into an unrecoverable dive.[38] Minor changes resolved the problem,[39] allowing the B.2 to enter service in February 1962.[40]

Further development edit

A total of 21 B.2 aircraft were upgraded to the B.2R standard with Conway RCo.17 engines (20,600 lbf or 92 kN thrust) and facilities to carry a Blue Steel stand-off nuclear missile.[41] Anti-radar chaff storage had to be relocated from under the nose as a result of the Blue Steel installation. Coincidentally, Peter White, a senior aerodynamicist attended a symposium in Brussels and learned of Whitcomb's conical shaped bodies set on the top of a wing which would add volume while reducing wave drag. However, the added skin friction drag meant an overall slight drag increase.[42] So large streamlined fairings were added to the top of the each wing to hold the chaff. The fairings behaved like "Küchemann carrots".[43] These were anti-shock bodies which reduced wave drag at transonic speeds (see area rule).[44] Handley Page proposed to build a further refined "Phase 6" Victor, with more fuel and capable of carrying up to four Skybolt (AGM-48) ballistic missiles on standing airborne patrols, but this proposal was rejected although it was agreed that some of the Victor B.2s on order would be fitted to carry two Skybolts. This plan was abandoned when the U.S. cancelled the Skybolt programme in 1963.[45] With the move to low-level penetration missions, the Victors were fitted with air-to-air refuelling probes above the cockpit and received large underwing fuel tanks.[46]

Nine B.2 aircraft were converted for strategic reconnaissance purposes to replace Valiants which had been withdrawn due to wing fatigue, with delivery beginning in July 1965.[25] These aircraft received a variety of cameras, a bomb bay-mounted radar mapping system and air sampling equipment to detect particles released from nuclear testing.[28] Designated Victor SR.2, a single aircraft could photograph the whole of the United Kingdom in a single two-hour sortie.[dubious ] Different camera configurations could be installed in the bomb bay, including up to four F49 survey cameras and up to eight F96 cameras could be fitted to take vertical or oblique daylight photography; nighttime photography required the fitting of F89 cameras.[47]

Aerial refuelling conversion edit

 
Victor K.2 of No. 55 Squadron RAF in 1985; note the deployed refuelling drogues.

Prior to the demise of the Valiant as a tanker, a trial installation of refuelling equipment was carried out using the Victor, including: overload bomb-bay tanks, underwing tanks, refuelling probe and jettisonable de Havilland Spectre Assisted Take-Off units. The aircraft involved in the trials, B.1 "XA930", carried out successful trials at Boscombe Down at very high all-up weights with relatively short field length take-offs.[48]

With the withdrawal of the Valiant because of metal fatigue in December 1964 the RAF had no flight-refuelling capability, so the B.1/1A aircraft, by then surplus in the strategic bomber role, were refitted for this duty. To get some tankers into service as quickly as possible, six B.1A aircraft were converted to B(K).1A standard (later redesignated B.1A (K2P)[49]), receiving a two-point system with a hose and drogue carried under each wing, while the bomb bay remained available for weapons. Handley Page worked day and night to convert these six aircraft, with the first being delivered on 28 April 1965, and 55 Squadron becoming operational in the tanker role in August 1965.[50]

While these six aircraft provided a limited tanker capability suitable for refuelling fighters, the Mk 20A wing hosereels delivered fuel at too low a rate to be suitable for refuelling bombers. Work therefore continued to produce a definitive three-point tanker conversion of the Victor Mk.1. Fourteen further B.1A and 11 B.1 were fitted with two permanently fitted fuel tanks in the bomb bay, and a high-capacity Mk 17 centreline hose dispenser unit with three times the fuel flow rate as the wing reels, and were designated K.1A and K.1 respectively.[50]

The remaining B.2 aircraft were not as suited to the low-level mission profile that the RAF had adopted for carrying out strategic bombing missions as the Vulcan with its stronger delta wing.[51] This, combined with the switch of the nuclear deterrent from the RAF to the Royal Navy (with the Polaris missile) meant that the Victors were declared surplus to requirements.[28] Hence, 24 B.2 were modified to K.2 standard. Similar to the K.1/1A conversions, the wing, which was to have been fitted with tip fuel tanks to reduce wing fatigue, had 18 inches removed from each tip instead and the bomb aimer's nose glazing was replaced with metal. During 1982, the glazing was reintroduced on some aircraft, the former nose bomb aimer's position having been used to mount F95 cameras in order to perform reconnaissance missions during the Falklands War.[52] The K.2 could carry 91,000 lb (41,000 kg) of fuel. It served in the tanker role until withdrawn in October 1993.[28]

Design edit

Overview edit

 
Head-on view of a Victor during a ground taxi run, 2006

The Victor was a futuristic-looking, streamlined aircraft, with four turbojet (later turbofan) engines buried in the thick wing roots. Distinguishing features of the Victor were its highly swept T-tail with considerable dihedral on the tail planes, and a prominent chin bulge that contained the targeting radar, nose landing gear unit and an auxiliary bomb aimer's position.[53] It was originally required by the specification that the whole nose section could be detached at high altitudes to act as an escape pod, but the Air Ministry abandoned this requirement in 1950.[54][55]

The Victor had a five-man crew, comprising the two pilots seated side by side and three rearward-facing crew, these being the navigator/plotter, the navigator/radar operator, and the air electronics officer (AEO).[56] The Victor's pilots sat at the same level as the rest of the crew, due to a large pressurised compartment that extended all the way to the nose.[53] As with the other V-bombers, only the pilots were provided with ejection seats; the three systems operators relying on "explosive cushions" inflated by a CO2 bottle that would help them from their seats, but despite this, escape for them would have still been very unlikely in most emergency situations.[57][58][N 4]

While assigned to the nuclear delivery role, the Victor was finished in an all-over anti-flash white colour scheme, designed to protect the aircraft against the damaging effects of a nuclear detonation. The white colour scheme was intended to reflect heat away from the aircraft; paler variations of RAF's roundels were also applied for this same reason. When the V-bombers were assigned to the low-level approach profile in the 1960s, the Victors were soon repainted in green/grey tactical camouflage to reduce visibility to ground observation; the same scheme was applied to subsequently converted tanker aircraft.[60]

Armaments and equipment edit

 
Victor landing at RNAS Yeovilton 1984; note airbrakes extended.

The Victor's bomb bay was much larger than that of the Valiant and Vulcan, which allowed heavier weapon loads to be carried at the cost of range. As an alternative to the single "10,000 lb" nuclear bomb as required by the specification, the bomb bay was designed to carry several conventional armaments, including a single 22,000 lb (10,000 kg) Grand Slam or two 12,000 lb (5,400 kg) Tallboy earthquake bombs, up to forty-eight 1,000 lb (450 kg) bombs[N 5] or thirty-nine 2,000 lb (910 kg) sea mines. One proposed addition to the Victor were underwing panniers capable of carrying a further 28 1,000 lb bombs to supplement the main bomb bay, but this option was not pursued.[61]

In addition to a range of free-fall nuclear bombs, later Victor B.2s operated as missile carriers for standoff nuclear missiles such as Blue Steel.[62] Target information for Blue Steel could be input during flight, as well in advance of the mission. It was reported that, with intensive work, a B.2 missile carrier could revert to carrying free-fall nuclear weapons or conventional munitions within 30 hours.[63]

Like the other two V-Bombers, the Victor made use of the Navigational and Bombing System (NBS); a little-used optical sight had also been installed upon early aircraft.[64] For navigation and bomb-aiming purposes, the Victor employed several radar systems. These included the H2S radar, developed from the first airborne ground-scanning radar, and the Green Satin radar.[65] Radar information was inputted into the onboard electromechanical analogue bomb-aiming apparatus. Some of the navigation and targeting equipment was either directly descended from, or shared concepts with, those used on Handley Page's preceding Halifax bomber. Operationally, the accuracy of the bomb-aiming system proved to be limited to roughly 400 yards, which was deemed sufficient for high-level nuclear strike operations.[66]

Avionics and systems edit

The Victor had fully powered flying controls for the ailerons, elevators and rudder, with no manual reversion which, therefore required duplication as back-up. Since the control surfaces were fully powered an artificial feel unit was provided, fed by ram air from the pitot in the nose. Pilot control movements were transmitted via a low-friction mechanical system to the flying control units. Duplication was provided on the premise that the single pilot's input would remain functional and that neither hydraulic motors nor screwjack on a unit would jam. A separate hydraulic circuit was used for each of the following: landing gear, flaps, nose flaps, air brakes, bomb doors, wheel brakes, nose-wheel steering, ram-air-turbine air scoops.[36] An AC electrical system and auxiliary power unit were significant additions to the later Victor B.2, electrical reliability being noticeably improved.[67][N 6]

To evade enemy detection and interception efforts, the Victor was outfitted with an extensive ECM suite which were operated by the air electronics officer (AEO), who had primary responsibility for the aircraft's electronics and communication systems. The ECM equipment could be employed to disrupt effective use of both active and passive radar in the vicinity of the aircraft, and to provide situational awareness for the crew. Enemy communications could also be jammed, and radar guided missiles of the era were also reportedly rendered ineffective.[69] The Victor B.2 featured an extended area located around the base of the tail fin which contained cooling systems and some of the ECM equipment.[70]

Some of the ECM equipment which initially saw use on the Victor, such as the original chaff dispenser and Orange Putter tail warning radar, had been developed for the earlier English Electric Canberra bomber and was already considered to be near-obsolete by the time the Victor had entered service.[71] Significant improvements and alterations would be made to the avionics and ECM suites, as effective ECMs had been deemed critical to the Victor's role; for example, the introduction of the more capable Red Steer tail warning radar.[72] The introduction of the Victor B.2 was accompanied by several new ECM systems, including a passive radar warning receiver, a metric radar jammer and communications jamming equipment. Streamlined fairings on the trailing edges of the wings that could house large quantities of defensive chaff/flares were also new additions.[73] While trials were conducted with terrain-following radar and a side scan mode for the bombing and navigation radar, neither of these functions were integrated into the operational fleet.[28]

Engines edit

 
Rolls-Royce Conway RCo.17 Mk 201 on static display

The Victor B.1 was powered by four Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire turbojet engines. The engines were embedded in pairs in the wing roots. Because of the mid wing position, the tail was mounted at the tip of the fin to keep clear of the jet efflux.[74] Sapphire engines installed in the Victor suffered 'centre-line closure' failures flying in dense cloud or heavy rain flying in the tropics.[64][75] The Victor B.2 was powered by the newer Rolls-Royce Conway turbofan which at one point was the most powerful non-afterburning engine outside the Soviet Union. The Conway had significantly higher thrust than the Sapphire engine in the B.1.[76]

The Victor B.2 had a Blackburn Artouste auxiliary power unit (AAPU) installed in the starboard wing root. It provided high-pressure air for starting the engines, and also provided electrical power on the ground or in the air as an emergency power supply if the engine-driven generators failed. It also reduced the need for some ground support equipment. Two turbine-driven alternators, otherwise known as ram air turbines (RATs), had been introduced on the B.2 to provide emergency power in the event of electrical power being lost. Retractable scoops in the rear fuselage would open to feed ram air to them enabling them to generate sufficient electrical power to operate the flight controls. In the event of engine flameout RATs would enable the crew to keep control of the aircraft until the engines could be relit.[35][36]

Flight profile edit

The Victor was commonly described as having good handling and excellent performance, along with favourable low speed flight characteristics.[77] During the flight tests of the first prototype, the Victor proved its aerodynamic performance, flying up to Mach 0.98 without handling or buffeting problems; there were next to no aerodynamic changes between prototype and production aircraft.[78][N 7] Production aircraft featured an automated nose-flap operation to counteract a tendency for the aircraft to pitch upwards during low-to-moderate Mach numbers.[80] At low altitude, the Victor typically flew in a smooth and comfortable manner, in part due to its narrowness and flexibility of the crescent wing.[81] One unusual flight characteristic of the early Victor was its self-landing capability; once lined up with the runway, the aircraft would naturally flare as the wing entered into ground effect while the tail continued to sink, giving a cushioned landing without any command or intervention by the pilot.[29][82] However, this characteristic was considered to be of no special advantage according to an assessment of the second prototype by the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment.[83]

The Victor has been described as an agile aircraft, atypical for a large bomber aircraft; in 1958, a Victor had performed several loops and a barrel roll during practices for a display flight at Farnborough Airshow.[84][85] Manoeuvrability was greatly enabled by the light controls, quick response of the aircraft, and the design of certain flight surfaces such as the infinitely-variable tail-mounted airbrake.[86] The Victor was designed for flight at high subsonic speeds, although multiple instances have occurred in which the sound barrier was broken.[87] During development of the Victor B.2, the RAF had stressed the concept of tactical manoeuvrability, which led to much effort in development being given to increasing the aircraft's height and range performance.[88]

Operational history edit

 
Victor B.1 (XA922) on a landing approach, circa 1959

The Victor was the last of the V bombers to enter service, with deliveries of B.1s to No. 232 Operational Conversion Unit RAF based at RAF Gaydon, Warwickshire taking place in late 1957.[89] The first operational bomber squadron, 10 Squadron, formed at RAF Cottesmore in April 1958, with a second squadron, 15 Squadron, forming before the end of the year.[90] Four Victors, fitted with Yellow Astor reconnaissance radar, together with passive sensors, were used to equip a secretive unit, the Radar Reconnaissance Flight at RAF Wyton.[89][90] The Victor bomber force continued to build up, with 57 Squadron forming in March 1959 and 55 Squadron in October 1960.[49][91] At its height, the Victor was simultaneously operating with six squadrons of RAF Bomber Command.[64]

According to the operational doctrine developed by the RAF, in the circumstance of deploying a large-scale nuclear strike, each Victor would have operated entirely independently; the crews would conduct their mission without external guidance and be reliant upon the effectiveness of their individual tactics to reach and successfully attack their assigned target; thus great emphasis was placed on continuous crew training during peacetime.[92] Developing a sense of a crew unity was considered highly important; Victor crews would typically serve together for at least five years, and a similar approach was adopted with ground personnel.[93] In order to maximise the operational lifespan of each aircraft, Victor crews typically flew a single five-hour training mission per week.[94] Each crew member was required to qualify for servicing certificates to independently undertake inspection, refuelling and turnaround operations.[79]

 
Victor K2 (XH669) refuelling a pair of English Electric Lightnings, September 1978

In times of high international tension, the V-bombers would have dispersed and been maintained at a high state of readiness; if the order was given to deploy a nuclear strike, Victors at high readiness would have been airborne in under four minutes.[95] British intelligence had estimated that the Soviets' radar network was capable of detecting the Victor at up to 200 miles away, so to avoid interception, the Victor would follow carefully planned routes to exploit weaknesses in the Soviet detection network. This tactic was employed in conjunction with the Victor's extensive onboard ECM to increase the chances of evasion.[69] Whilst originally the Victor would have maintained high-altitude flight throughout a nuclear strike mission, rapid advances of the Soviet anti-aircraft warfare capabilities (exemplified by the downing of a U-2 from 70,000 ft in 1960) led to this tactic being abandoned: a low-level high-speed approach supported by increasingly sophisticated ECMs was adopted in its place.[96][97]

The improved Victor B.2 started to be delivered in 1961, with the first B.2 Squadron, 139 Squadron, forming in February 1962, and a second, 100 Squadron, in May 1962.[40] These were the only two bomber squadrons to form on the B.2, as the last 28 Victors on order were cancelled.[25] The prospect of Skybolt ballistic missiles, with which each V-bomber could strike at two separate targets, meant that fewer bombers would be needed.[98] The government was also unhappy with Sir Frederick Handley Page's resistance to its pressure to merge his company with competitors.[99] Following Skybolt's cancellation, Victor B.2s were retrofitted as carrier aircraft for the Blue Steel standoff nuclear missile. The introduction of standoff weapons and the switch to low-level flight in order to evade radar detection were said to be decisive factors in the successful penetration of enemy territory.[62]

 
A Victor and a Vulcan at Richmond Air Show, New South Wales, 1964

In 1964–1965, a series of detachments of Victor B.1As was deployed to RAF Tengah, Singapore as a deterrent against Indonesia during the Borneo conflict, the detachments fulfilling a strategic deterrent role as part of Far East Air Force, while also giving valuable training in low-level flight and visual bombing.[100][101] In September 1964, with the confrontation with Indonesia reaching a peak, the detachment of four Victors was prepared for rapid dispersal, with two aircraft loaded with live conventional bombs and held on one-hour readiness, ready to fly operational sorties. However, they were never required to fly combat missions and the high readiness alert finished at the end of the month.[102]

Following the discovery of fatigue cracks, developing due to their low-altitude usage,[99] the B.2R strategic bombers were retired and placed in storage by the end of 1968. The RAF had experienced intense demand on its existing aerial refuelling tanker fleet, and its existing fleet of Victor B.1 tankers that had been converted earlier were due to be retired in the 1970s, so it was decided that the stored Victor B.2Rs would be converted to tankers also.[103] Handley Page prepared a modification scheme that would see the Victors fitted with tip tanks, the structure modified to limit further fatigue cracking in the wings, and ejection seats provided for all six crewmembers.[104][105] The Ministry of Defence delayed signing the order for conversion of the B2s until after Handley Page went into liquidation. The contract for conversion was instead awarded to Hawker Siddeley, who produced a much simpler conversion proposal, with the wingspan shortened to reduce wing bending stress and hence extend airframe life.[106]

 
Victor K2 (XL161) approaching RAF Abingdon, September 1979

While the Victor was never permanently based with any units stationed overseas, temporary deployments were frequently conducted, often in a ceremonial capacity or to participate in training exercises and competitions. Victor squadrons were dispatched on several extended deployments to the Far East, and short term deployments to Canada were also conducted for training purposes.[107] At one point during the early 1960s, South Africa showed considerable interest in the acquisition of several bomber-configured Victors.[108]

Several of the Victor B.2s had been converted for Strategic Reconnaissance missions following the retirement of the Valiant in this capacity. In service, this type was primarily used in surveillance of the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Seas, capable of surveying 400,000 square miles in an eight-hour mission; they were also used to sample the fallout from French nuclear tests conducted in the South Pacific.[109] Originally reconnaissance Victors were equipped for visual reconnaissance; it was found to be cheaper to assign Canberra light bombers to this duty and the cameras were removed in 1970. Subsequently, radar-based reconnaissance was emphasised in the type's role.[110] The reconnaissance Victors remained in use until 1974 when they followed the standard bombers into the tanker conversion line; a handful of modified Avro Vulcans assumed the maritime radar reconnaissance role in their place.[100]

Both the Victor and the Vulcan, played a high-profile role during the 1982 Falklands War. In order to cross the distance of the South Atlantic, a single Vulcan required refuelling several times from Victor tankers. A total of three bombing missions were flown against Argentine forces deployed to the Falklands, with approximately 1.1 million gal (5 million L) of fuel consumed in each mission.[111][112] At the time, these missions held the record for the world's longest-distance bombing raids.[113] The deployment of other assets to the theatre, such as the Hawker Siddeley Nimrod and Lockheed Hercules, required the support of the Victor tanker fleet, which had been temporarily relocated to RAF Ascension Island for the campaign.[114][115] The Victor also undertook several reconnaissance missions over the South Atlantic. These missions provided valuable intelligence for the retaking of South Georgia by British forces.[116]

External videos
  Documentary on the Black Buck raids

Following the invasion of Kuwait by neighbouring Iraq in 1991, a total of eight Victor K.2s were deployed to Bahrain to provide in-flight refuelling support to RAF and other coalition aircraft during the subsequent 1991 Gulf War.[99][117] RAF strike aircraft such as the Panavia Tornado would frequently make use of the tanker to refuel prior to launching cross-border strikes inside Iraq. The remaining Victor fleet was retired in 1993, at which point it had been the last of the three V-bombers in operational service.[118]

Variants edit

 
Ventral plan of a Victor K.2
 
3-view of Victor B.1
 
3-view of Victor B.2
HP.80
Prototype, two aircraft built.[49]
Victor B.1
Strategic bomber aircraft, 50 built.[49]
Victor B.1A
Strategic bomber aircraft, B.1 updated with Red Steer tail warning radar and ECM suite, 24 converted.[119]
Victor B.1A (K.2P)
2-point in-flight refuelling tanker retaining bomber capability, six converted.[120]
Victor BK.1
3-point in-flight refuelling tanker (renamed K.1 after bombing capability removed), 11 converted.[120]
Victor BK.1A
3-point in-flight refuelling tanker (renamed K.1A as for K.1), 14 converted.[120]
Victor B.2
Strategic bomber aircraft, 34 built.[49]
Victor B.2RS
Blue Steel-capable aircraft with RCo.17 Conway 201 engines, 21 converted.[120]
Victor B(SR).2
Strategic reconnaissance aircraft, nine converted.[49]
Victor K.2
In-flight refuelling tanker. 24 converted from B.2 and B(SR).2.[49]
HP.96
Proposed military transport of 1950 with new fuselage carrying 85 troops. Unbuilt.[121]
HP.97
1950 civil airliner project. Not built.[121]
HP.98
Proposed pathfinder version with remotely operated tail guns and powered by Conway engines. Rejected in favour of Valiant B.2.[122]
HP.101
Proposed military transport version of HP.97. Not built.[100]
HP.104
Proposed "Phase 3" bomber of 1955 powered by Bristol Olympus or Sapphire engines. Not built.[123]
HP.111
1958 project for military or civil transport, powered by four Conway engines. Capacity for 200 troops in military version or 145 passengers in airliner in a double-decker fuselage.[124]
HP.114
Proposed "Phase 6" bomber designed for standing patrols carrying two or four GAM-87 Skybolt ballistic missiles.[45]
HP.123
Proposed military tactical transport based on HP.111 and fitted with blown flaps. Rejected in favour of Armstrong Whitworth AW.681.[125]

Operators edit

 
Victor B.1A (K.2P) XH648 preserved at the Imperial War Museum Duxford

Accidents and incidents edit

  • 14 July 1954: WB771 the prototype HP.80 crashed during a test flight at Cranfield, England. All four crewmen died. The tailplane detached from the top of the fin.[129]
  • 16 April 1958: XA921 a B.1 undertaking Ministry of Supply trials experienced a collapse of the rear bomb bay bulkhead while cycling the bomb bay doors, damaging hydraulic and electrical systems; the aircraft successfully returned to base. Following the incident, in-service Victors had restrictions put in place on the opening of the bomb doors until Modification 943 was applied to all aircraft.[130]
  • 20 August 1959: XH668 a B2 of the A&AEE lost a pitot head and dived into the sea off Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire.[131] More than 40 ships and 4,000 people were involved in the recovery of 600,000 pieces of the missing bomber, an exercise referred to as 'Operation Victor Search'.[132]
  • 19 June 1960: XH617 a B1A of 57 Squadron caught fire in the air and was abandoned near Diss, Norfolk.[131]
  • 23 March 1962: XL159 a B2 of the A&AEE stalled and dived into a house at Stubton, Lincolnshire.[133]
  • 14 June 1962: XH613 a B1A of 15 Squadron lost power on all engines and was abandoned on approach to RAF Cottesmore.[131]
  • 16 June 1962: XA929 a B1 of 10 Squadron overshot the runway and broke up at RAF Akrotiri following an aborted takeoff.[134]
  • 2 October 1962: XA934 a B1 of 'A' Squadron, 232 OCU had an engine failure and deliberate shutdown of the adjacent engine on takeoff from RAF Gaydon. During the approach to land the other two engines flamed out.[134] The aircraft crashed into a copse several miles from RAF Gaydon. Of the four crew on board only the co-pilot survived. The RAF accident record states the prime cause as mis-management of the fuel system and consequent fuel starvation of the two running engines.
  • 20 March 1963: XM714 a B2 of 100 Squadron stalled after takeoff from RAF Wittering.[135]
  • 29 June 1966: XM716 a SR2 of 543 Squadron was giving a demonstration flight for the press and television at RAF Wyton.[136] The aircraft had made one high-speed circuit and was flying low in a wide arc to return over the airfield when the starboard wing was seen to break away and both it and the rest of the aircraft burst into flames.[136] All four crew were killed.[136] The aircraft was the first SR2 to enter service with the squadron. The aircraft had exceeded its operational limitations causing overstressing.[137][138]
  • 19 August 1968: Victor K1 XH646 of 214 Squadron collided in midair near Holt, Norfolk in bad weather with a 213 Squadron English Electric Canberra WT325; all four crew members of the Victor died, as did all three on board the Canberra.[131][139][140]
  • 10 May 1973: XL230 a SR2 of 543 Squadron bounced during landing at RAF Wyton and exploded.[133]
  • 24 March 1975: Victor K1A XH618 of 57 Squadron was involved in a midair collision with Blackburn Buccaneer XV156 during a simulated refuelling. The Buccaneer hit the Victor's tailplane causing the Victor to crash into the sea 95 mi (153 km) east of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, four crew killed.[131][137]
  • 29 Sept 1976: XL513 a K2 of No 55 Squadron aborted take off and overshot the runway at RAF Marham after a bird strike. The crew escaped with no serious injuries. The aircraft caught fire and was damaged beyond repair.[141]
  • 15 October 1982: XL232 a K2 of No 55 Squadron suffered an uncontained turbine failure early in the take off run. The aircraft was stopped and the crew evacuated the aircraft with no injuries. Debris from the turbine penetrated a fuselage fuel tank, starting an uncontrolled fire, destroying the aircraft and damaging the runway at RAF Marham.[142]
  • 19 June 1986: XL191 a K2 of 57 Squadron undershot approach at Hamilton, Ontario.[133]
  • 29 February 1988: Landing accident at USAF Offutt AB-hydraulic failure resulted in the aircraft running off the runway. As recorded and illustrated in Flypast October 2008 p. 107, this resulted in ‘I Ran Offut’ artwork being applied to the crew door. Many of the USAF groundcrew at Offutt were Irish- American, so the tongue-in-cheek phrase is meant to be said in an Irish accent, ‘I ran off it’.
  • 3 May 2009: During a "fast taxi" run at Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome, XM715 (Teasin' Tina) made a brief unplanned flight, reaching a height of about 30 ft (9 m) at maximum, then carrying out a safe landing before the aircraft could reach the runway threshold. The aircraft did not have a permit to fly; however, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) stated that they would not be conducting an investigation.[143] Teasin' Tina became airborne after the plane's co-pilot had failed to reply to the command "throttles back"; the pilot then had to control the throttles himself, the confusion temporarily disrupting firm control of the aircraft.[144][145]

Surviving aircraft edit

 
Victor XL231 Lusty Lindy, 2011
 
Victor XM715 Teasin' Tina, 2008

A total of four Victors have survived and are on display in the United Kingdom. None are flightworthy.[146]

A fifth airframe, Victor K.2 XH673: A K.2 served as Gate guardian at RAF Marham when retired in 1993, but in early 2020 she was offered up for disposal, with the word being that she was in a structurally unsafe condition. In spite of preservation attempts as of December 2020 most of the airframe had been scrapped.[151] In February 2021, the RAF released the time-lapse footage of this airframe being dismantled.[152]

Specifications (Handley Page Victor B.1) edit

 
3 view of Victor

Data from Handley Page Aircraft since 1907[125]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 5
  • Length: 114 ft 11 in (35.03 m)
  • Wingspan: 110 ft (34 m)
  • Height: 28 ft 1.5 in (8.573 m) [49]
  • Wing area: 2,406 sq ft (223.5 m2)
  • Airfoil: Root: 16% Modified RAE Airfoil; Tip: 6% Modified RAE Airfoil[153]
  • Empty weight: 89,030 lb (40,383 kg) [154]
  • Max takeoff weight: 205,000 lb (92,986 kg)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Armstrong Siddeley A.S.Sa.7 Sapphire turbojet engines, 11,050 lbf (49.2 kN) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 545 kn (627 mph, 1,009 km/h) at 36,000 ft (11,000 m)[49]
  • Range: 5,217 nmi (6,004 mi, 9,662 km)
  • Service ceiling: 56,000 ft (17,000 m)

Armament

  • Bombs:
    • Up to 35 × 1,000 lb (450 kg) bombs or
    • Yellow Sun free-fall nuclear bomb

Notable appearances in media edit

A 1964 Gerhard Richter painting titled XL 513 depicts Victor K.2, which was lost in a 1976 accident at RAF Marham.[155]

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Frederick Handley Page, the founder and owner of Handley Page, had anticipated that there would be a need to replace the Lincoln bomber well in advance of any requirement, having issued a memo on 14 June 1945 requesting the immediate investigation of two new bomber designs.[3]
  2. ^ According to aviation author Jon Lake, the name 'Victor' had originated from British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.[12]
  3. ^ Paul Langston, an observer on-board while XA917 broke the sound barrier, has the distinction of being the first man to break the sound barrier seated backwards.[30]
  4. ^ Martin Baker developed and tested rearward ejection systems for both the Valiant and the Vulcan, proceeding to the point of a modified Valiant undergoing testing; however the company concluded that the same approach on the Victor would be substantially more difficult due to structural reasons.[59]
  5. ^ In operational service with the RAF, a maximum payload of 35 1,000 lb bombs could be carried.[49]
  6. ^ Godfrey Lee, one of the aircraft's designers, stated of the electrical changes that "an unbelievable improvement followed from going over from DC to AC".[68]
  7. ^ Hedley Hazelden, Handley Page's chief test pilot, stated that "From a pilot's point of view, the Victor wasn't that much of a problem. In spite of innovations such as powered controls and nose flaps, it flew like any other aeroplane".[79]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Wynn 1997, pp. 7, 16.
  2. ^ Wynn 1997, p. 18.
  3. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 6.
  4. ^ a b Buttler Air Enthusiast January–February 1999, pp. 28–31.
  5. ^ Wynn 1997, pp. 44–46.
  6. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 7.
  7. ^ Brookes 2011, pp. 6–7.
  8. ^ a b Gunston 1973, p. 80
  9. ^ Lee, G.H. "Aerodynamics of the Crescent Wing." Flight, 14 May 1954, pp. 611–612.
  10. ^ Flight 30 October 1959, p. 463.
  11. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 9.
  12. ^ a b Lake 2002, p. 364.
  13. ^ Buttler Air Enthusiast January–February 1999, pp. 38–39.
  14. ^ Donald 2008, pp. 127–128.
  15. ^ The Handley Page Victor The History & Development Of A Classic Jet, Volume One,Roger R. Brooks,ISBN 978 1 84415 411 1, p.54
  16. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 502.
  17. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 503.
  18. ^ "This British Bomber Leads The World." The Age, 15 January 1953. p. 2.
  19. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 9.
  20. ^ Brooks The Handley Page Victor: Volume 1 2007, p. 114.
  21. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 506.
  22. ^ Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, p. 61.
  23. ^ Darling 2012, p. 49.
  24. ^ Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, pp. 61–62.
  25. ^ a b c Mason 1994, p. 388.
  26. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 29.
  27. ^ Leitch Air Enthusiast September–October 2003, pp. 55, 58.
  28. ^ a b c d e . Gatwick Aviation Museum. Archived from the original on 15 May 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  29. ^ a b Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, p. 63.
  30. ^ a b Brookes 2011, p. 10.
  31. ^ Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, p. 62.
  32. ^ Barnes 1976, pp. 509–511.
  33. ^ Darling 2012, p. 50.
  34. ^ ap Rees Air Pictorial June 1972, p. 220.
  35. ^ a b Fraser-Mitchell 2009, pp. 86–87.
  36. ^ a b c Flight 30 October 1959, p. 472.
  37. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 514.
  38. ^ Middleton Air Enthusiast Winter 1993, pp. 70–71.
  39. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 516.
  40. ^ a b Barnes 1976, pp. 519–520.
  41. ^ Mason 1994, pp. 388–389.
  42. ^ Brooks The Handley Page Victor: Volume 2 2007, p. 190
  43. ^ Gunston 1973, p. 101
  44. ^ ap Rees Air Pictorial June 1972, p. 222.
  45. ^ a b Barnes 1976, p. 518.
  46. ^ Rodwell Flight 13 February 1964, p. 241.
  47. ^ Darling 2012, pp. 52–53.
  48. ^ Barnes 1976, p.P. 513-514.
  49. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Mason 1994, p. 389.
  50. ^ a b Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, pp. 64–65.
  51. ^ Darling 2012, p. 53.
  52. ^ Darling 2012, pp. 162–163.
  53. ^ a b Flight 19 September 1958, p. 495.
  54. ^ ap Rees Air Pictorial May 1972, p. 166.
  55. ^ Gunston Aeroplane Monthly January 1981, pp. 6–7.
  56. ^ Flight 19 September 1958, pp. 494–495.
  57. ^ Gunston Aeroplane Monthly January 1981, p. 9.
  58. ^ "The V-Bomber Ejector Seat Story." BBC. Retrieved: 27 September 2010.
  59. ^ Hamilton-Paterson 2010, p. 156.
  60. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, pp. 38–39.
  61. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 508.
  62. ^ a b Rodwell Flight 13 February 1964, pp. 241–242.
  63. ^ Rodwell Flight 13 February 1964, p. 245.
  64. ^ a b c Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 61.
  65. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 40.
  66. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 21.
  67. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 44.
  68. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 13.
  69. ^ a b Brookes 2011, p. 24.
  70. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 519.
  71. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 39.
  72. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 39-40.
  73. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, pp. 44, 47.
  74. ^ Flight 30 October 1959, pp. 463–465.
  75. ^ Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 2 2007, p. 282
  76. ^ Flight 30 October 1959, pp. 463–466.
  77. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 60.
  78. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 31.
  79. ^ a b Brookes 2011, p. 18.
  80. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 33.
  81. ^ Hamilton-Paterson 2010, p. 112.
  82. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 29.
  83. ^ Brooks The Handley Page Victor: Volume 1 2007, p. 124
  84. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 35.
  85. ^ "Farnborough Week: The most Memorable S.B.A.C. Display Yet." Flight International, 12 September 1958. pp. 438, 442.
  86. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 32.
  87. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, pp. 33–34.
  88. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, pp. 60–61.
  89. ^ a b c Mason 1994, p. 387.
  90. ^ a b Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, pp. 62–63.
  91. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 63.
  92. ^ Flight 19 September 1958, p. 493.
  93. ^ Flight 19 September 1958, pp. 493–495.
  94. ^ Flight 19 September 1958, p. 494.
  95. ^ Brookes 2011, pp. 23–24.
  96. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 49.
  97. ^ Windle and Bowman 2009, p. 21.
  98. ^ Barnes 1976, pp. 518–519.
  99. ^ a b c Lake 2002, p. 369.
  100. ^ a b c Barnes 1976, p. 527.
  101. ^ Rodwell Flight 6 May 1965, p. 703.
  102. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 65.
  103. ^ Darling 2012, pp. 110–111.
  104. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 526.
  105. ^ Fraser-Mitchell 2009, pp. 88–89.
  106. ^ Fraser-Mitchell 2009, pp. 90–91.
  107. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, pp. 72, 75.
  108. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 75.
  109. ^ Butler and Buttler 2009, p. 72.
  110. ^ Brookes 2011, p. 69.
  111. ^ "The Falkland Islands: A history of the 1982 conflict." Royal Air Force, 29 April 2010.
  112. ^ "Operation Black Buck." 14 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Royal Air Force, Retrieved: 20 April 2014.
  113. ^ Bull 2004, p. 84.
  114. ^ Thompson, Julian. "Falklands Conflict Gallery." BBC, June 2007.
  115. ^ "Narrative of RAF Contribution to the Falklands Campaign." The National Archives, Retrieved: 20 April 2014.
  116. ^ Darling 2012, pp. 162–165.
  117. ^ "RAF Aircraft in Operation Granby." 11 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Royal Air Force, Retrieved: 20 April 2014.
  118. ^ Brookes 2011, pp. 90–91.
  119. ^ Brookes and Davy 2011, pp. 14–15.
  120. ^ a b c d "Handley Page Victor K2". Royal Air Force Museum, 2010. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  121. ^ a b Barnes 1976, p. 498.
  122. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 501.
  123. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 605.
  124. ^ Barnes 1976, pp. 527–529.
  125. ^ a b Barnes 1976, p. 529.
  126. ^ Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981, p. 65.
  127. ^ Ashworth 1989, p. 131.
  128. ^ Brookes 2011, pp. 75, 92.
  129. ^ The Determination of the Flutter Speed of a T-tail Unit by Calculations, Model Tests and Flight Flutter Tests, Baldock, October 1958, AGARD Report 221 para.2.6
  130. ^ Darling 2012, p. 55.
  131. ^ a b c d e Halley 2001, p. 42.
  132. ^ McCracken, Niall (23 July 2023). "Operation Victor search: A missing military plane and the Mourne fishermen". BBC. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  133. ^ a b c Halley 2001, p. 54.
  134. ^ a b Halley 2001, p. 9.
  135. ^ Halley 2001, p. 64.
  136. ^ a b c "A Victor 2 Falls in Flames Four killed in display run." The Times, Issue 56671, 30 June 1966, p. 1, Column G.
  137. ^ a b "Handley Page Victor". Ejection History. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  138. ^ Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 2 2007, p. 268
  139. ^ Barnes 1976, p. 525.
  140. ^ "UK Military Aircraft Losses: 1968". ukserials.com. Wolverhampton Aviation Group. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  141. ^ ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 55300, retrieved 22 August 2015
  142. ^ ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 55299
  143. ^ "Pictures: Victor bomber accidentally becomes airborne during taxi demo." Flight International, 9 September 2009. Retrieved: 24 July 2010.
  144. ^ "Probe into unauthorised Victor flight." 26 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Leicester Mercury, 9 September 2009. Retrieved: 24 July 2010.
  145. ^ "Victor test flight." YouTube video. Retrieved: 25 July 2010.
  146. ^ "Concorde will never fly again, says Vulcan restoration expert" Institute of Mechanical Engineers, 28 June 2013.
  147. ^ "Handley Page Victor." Imperial War Museum Duxford via The National Archive, Retrieved: 20 April 2014.
  148. ^ Simpson, Andrew. . Royal Air Force Museum Cosford. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  149. ^ The Victor Association. . The Victor Association. Archived from the original on 8 February 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  150. ^ Thunder & Lightnings (25 May 2010). "Survivor XM715". Thunder & Lightnings. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  151. ^ Thunder & Lightnings (2 December 2020). "XH673 Scrapped". Thunder & Lightnings. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  152. ^ "How to dismantle an RAF bomber". BBC News. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  153. ^ Lednicer, David (15 September 2010). "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". UIUC Applied Aerodynamics Group. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  154. ^ Fraser-Mitchell 2009, p. 86.
  155. ^ XL 513 » documenta 9 » Exhibitions » Gerhard Richter, retrieved 22 August 2015

Bibliography edit

  • ap Rees, Elfan. "Handley Page Victor: Part 1". Air Pictorial, May 1972, Vol. 34, No 5., pp. 162–167.
  • ap Rees, Elfan. "Handley Page Victor: Part 2". Air Pictorial, June 1972, Vol. 34, No 6., pp. 220–226.
  • Ashworth, Chris. Encyclopaedia of Modern Royal Air Force Squadrons. Wellingborough, UK: Patrick Stephens Limited, 1989. ISBN 1-85260-013-6.
  • Barnes, C.H. Handley Page Aircraft since 1907. London: Putnam, 1976. ISBN 0-370-00030-7.
  • Bull, Stephen. Encyclopedia of Military Technology And Innovation. Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004. ISBN 978-1-57356-557-8.
  • Butler, Phil and Tony Buttler. Aerofax: Handley-Page Victor. Midland Publishing, 2009. ISBN 1-85780-311-6.
  • Buttler, Tony. "Vital Bombers: Origins of the RAF's 'V-Bomber' Force". Air Enthusiast, No. 79, January–February 1999, pp. 28–41. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Brookes, Andrew. Victor Units of the Cold War. Osprey Publishing, 2011. ISBN 1-84908-339-8.
  • Brooks, Roger R. The Handley Page Victor: The History & Development of a Classic Jet: Volume 1 The HP80 Prototype & The Mark I, Barnsley, UK: Pen & Sword Aviation, 2007, ISBN 978 1 84415 411 1.
  • Brooks, Roger R. The Handley Page Victor: The History & Development of a Classic Jet: Volume 2, The Mark 2 and Comprehensive Appendices and Accident Analysis for all Marks Barnsley, UK:Pen & Sword Aviation, 2007. ISBN 978 1 84415 570 5
  • Darling, Kev. RAF Strike Command 1968 -2007: Aircraft, Men and Action. Casemate Publishers, 2012. ISBN 1-84884-898-6.
  • Donald, David. "Warplane Classic: Handley Page Victor." International Airpower Review, Issue 25, 2008, pp. 124–153. Westport, CT: AIRtime Publishing. ISSN 1473-9917.
  • Fraser-Mitchell, Harry. "Database: Handley Page Victor". Aeroplane, Vol. 37, No. 7, July 2009, pp. 73–94. ISSN 0143-7240.
  • Gunston, Bill. Bombers of the West. London: Ian Allan, 1973, pp. 78–102. ISBN 0-7110-0456-0.
  • Gardner, Brian (Spring 1994). "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 53. pp. 78–79. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Gunston, Bill."The V-Bombers: Handley Page Victor—Part 1". Aeroplane Monthly, Vol. 9, No 1, January 1981, pp. 4–9. ISSN 0143-7240.
  • Gunston, Bill."The V-Bombers: Handley Page Victor—Part 2". Aeroplane Monthly, Vol. 9, No 2, February 1981, pp. 60–65. ISSN 0143-7240.
  • Gunston, Bill."The V-Bombers: Handley Page Victor—Part 3". Aeroplane Monthly, Vol. 9, No 3, March 1981, pp. 136–139, 142–146. ISSN 0143-7240.
  • Halley, James. Royal Air Force Aircraft XA100 to XZ999. Tonbridge, Kent, UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd., 2001. ISBN 0-85130-311-0.
  • Hamilton-Paterson, James. Empire of the Clouds: When Britain's Aircraft Ruled the World. Faber & Faber, 2010. ISBN 0-57127-173-1.
  • Lake, Jon. The Great Book of Bombers: The World's Most Important Bombers from World War I to the Present Day. Zenith Imprint, 2002. ISBN 0-7603-1347-4.
  • Leich, Andy. "V Force Nuclear Arsenal: Weapons for the Valiant, Victor and Vulcan". Air Enthusiast, No. 107, September–October 2003, pp. 52–59. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Mason, Francis K. The British Bomber since 1914. London: Putnam, 1994. ISBN 0-85177-861-5.
  • Middleton, Don. "Testing the Victor". Air Enthusiast, Fifty-Two, Winter 1993. pp. 60–75. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • "Parade of Victors: No. 10 Squadron at RAF Cottesmore". Flight, 19 September 1958, pp. 493–496.
  • Rodwell, Robert R. "Lo-Hi Victor: Mixed Mission over Malaya". Flight, 6 May 1965. pp. 700–703.
  • Rodwell, Robert R. "The Steel in the Blue: Last Week's Glimpse of the V-force". Flight, 13 February 1964, pp. 241–245.
  • "Victor: A Technical Description of Britain's Latest V-Bomber." Flight, 30 October 1959, pp. 463–472.
  • Windle, Dave and Martin Bowman. V Bombers: Vulcan, Valiant and Victor, Casemate Publishers, 2009. ISBN 1-84415-827-6.
  • Wynn, Humphrey. RAF Strategic Nuclear Deterrent Forces: Origins, Roles and Deployment 1946–1969. London: The Stationery Office, 1997. ISBN 0-11-772833-0.

External links edit

  • Victor information from "Thunder and Lightnings"
  • Nuclear weapon drop methods including from a Victor
  • RAF gallery of Victor nose art

handley, page, victor, british, powered, strategic, bomber, developed, produced, handley, page, during, cold, third, final, bomber, operated, royal, force, other, being, vickers, valiant, avro, vulcan, entering, service, 1958, victor, initially, developed, par. The Handley Page Victor is a British jet powered strategic bomber developed and produced by Handley Page during the Cold War It was the third and final V bomber to be operated by the Royal Air Force RAF the other two being the Vickers Valiant and the Avro Vulcan Entering service in 1958 the Victor was initially developed as part of the United Kingdom s airborne nuclear deterrent but it was retired from the nuclear mission in 1968 following the discovery of fatigue cracks which had been exacerbated by the RAF s adoption of a low altitude flight profile to avoid interception and due to the pending introduction of the Royal Navy s submarine launched Polaris missiles in 1969 HP 80 VictorHandley Page HP 80 Victor K2 after landing with drag parachute deployedRole Strategic bomber or aerial refueling tanker aircraftNational origin United KingdomManufacturer Handley Page LimitedFirst flight 24 December 1952Introduction April 1958Retired 15 October 1993Status RetiredPrimary user Royal Air ForceProduced 1952 1963Number built 86With the nuclear deterrent mission relinquished to the Royal Navy a large V bomber fleet could not be justified A number of Victors were modified for strategic reconnaissance using a combination of radar cameras and other sensors Prior to the introduction of Polaris some had already been converted into tankers to replace Valiants further conversions to tankers followed and some of these re purposed Victors refuelled Vulcan bombers during the Black Buck raids of the Falklands War Remaining in the air refueling role the Victor was the last of the V bombers to be retired from service on 15 October 1993 In its refueling role the Victor was replaced by the Vickers VC10 and the Lockheed Tristar Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 HP 80 1 3 Victor B 1 1 4 Victor B 2 1 5 Further development 1 6 Aerial refuelling conversion 2 Design 2 1 Overview 2 2 Armaments and equipment 2 3 Avionics and systems 2 4 Engines 2 5 Flight profile 3 Operational history 4 Variants 5 Operators 6 Accidents and incidents 7 Surviving aircraft 8 Specifications Handley Page Victor B 1 9 Notable appearances in media 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Bibliography 12 External linksDevelopment editOrigins edit nbsp Painting of test Victor B1 XA918 by artist and former Handley Page employee Peter CoombsThe origin of the Victor and the other V bombers is heavily linked with the early British atomic weapons programme and nuclear deterrent policies that were developed in the aftermath of the Second World War The atom bomb programme formally began with Air Staff Operational Requirement OR 1001 issued in August 1946 which anticipated a government decision in January 1947 to authorise research and development work on atomic weapons the U S Atomic Energy Act of 1946 McMahon Act prohibited exporting atomic knowledge even to countries that had collaborated on the Manhattan Project 1 OR 1001 envisaged a weapon not to exceed 24 ft 2 in 7 37 m in length 5 ft 1 5 m in diameter 10 000 lb 4 500 kg in weight and suitable for release from 20 000 ft 6 100 m to 50 000 ft 15 000 m 2 At the same time the Air Ministry drew up requirements for bombers to replace the existing piston engined heavy bombers such as the Avro Lancaster and the new Avro Lincoln which equipped RAF Bomber Command N 1 In January 1947 the Ministry of Supply distributed Specification B 35 46 to aviation companies to satisfy Air Staff Operational Requirement OR 229 for a medium range bomber landplane capable of carrying one 10 000 lb 4 500 kg bomb to a target 1 500 nautical miles 1 700 mi 2 800 km from a base which may be anywhere in the world A cruising speed of 500 knots 580 mph 930 km h at heights between 35 000 ft 11 000 m and 50 000 ft 15 000 m was specified The maximum weight when fully loaded ought not to exceed 100 000 lb 45 000 kg The weapons load was to include a 10 000 lb 4 500 kg Special gravity bomb i e a free fall nuclear weapon or over shorter ranges 20 000 lb 9 100 kg of conventional bombs No defensive weapons were to be carried the aircraft relying on its speed and altitude to avoid opposing fighters 4 The similar OR 230 required a long range bomber with a 2 000 nautical miles 2 300 mi 3 700 km radius of action at a height of 50 000 ft 15 000 m a cruise speed of 575 mph 925 km h and a maximum weight of 200 000 lb 91 000 kg when fully loaded 5 Responses to OR 230 were received from Short Brothers Bristol and Handley Page however the Air Ministry recognised that developing an aircraft to meet these stringent requirements would have been technically demanding and so expensive that the resulting bomber could be purchased only in small numbers 6 As a result realising that the majority of likely targets would not require such a long range a less demanding specification for a medium range bomber Air Ministry Specification B 35 46 was issued This demanded the ability to carry the same 10 000 lb bomb load to a target 1 500 nautical miles 1 700 mi 2 800 km away at a height of 45 000 50 000 ft 14 000 15 000 m at a speed of 575 mph 925 km h 4 HP 80 edit The design proposed by Handley Page in response to B 35 46 was given the internal designation of HP 80 To achieve the required performance Handley Page s aerodynamicist Dr Gustav Lachmann and his deputy Godfrey Lee developed a crescent shaped swept wing for the HP 80 7 Aviation author Bill Gunston described the Victor s compound sweep crescent wing as having been undoubtedly the most efficient high subsonic wing on any drawing board in 1947 8 The sweep and chord of the wing decreased in three distinct steps from the root to the tip to ensure a constant critical Mach number across the entire wing and consequently a high cruise speed 9 The other parts of the aircraft which accelerate the flow the nose and tail were also designed for the same critical mach number so the shape of the HP 80 had a constant critical mach number all over 8 Early work on the project included tailless aircraft designs which would have used wing tip vertical surfaces instead however as the proposal matured a high mounted full tailplane was adopted instead 10 The profile and shaping of the crescent wing was subject to considerable fine tuning and alterations throughout the early development stages particularly to counter unfavourable pitching behaviour in flight 11 The HP 80 and Avro s Type 698 were chosen as the best two of the proposed designs to B 35 46 and orders for two prototypes of each were placed 12 It was recognised however that there were many unknowns associated with both designs and an order was also placed for Vickers design which became the Valiant Although not fully meeting the requirements of the specification the Valiant design posed little risk of failure and could therefore reach service earlier 13 The HP 80 s crescent wing was tested on a scale glider the HP 87 and a heavily modified Supermarine Attacker which was given the Handley Page HP 88 designation The HP 88 crashed on 26 August 1951 after completing only about thirty flights and little useful data was gained during its brief two months of existence By the time the HP 88 was ready the HP 80 wing had changed such that the former was no longer representative The design of the HP 80 had sufficiently advanced that the loss of the HP 88 had little effect on the programme 14 Two HP 80 prototypes WB771 and WB775 were built WB771 had been partially assembled at the Handley Page factory at Radlett airfield when the Ministry of Supply decided the runway was too short for the first flight 15 The aircraft parts were transported by road to RAF Boscombe Down where they were assembled for the first flight bulldozers were used to clear the route and create paths around obstacles Sections of the aircraft were hidden under wooden framing and tarpaulins printed with GELEYPANDHY SOUTHAMPTON to make it appear as a boat hull in transit GELEYPANDHY was an anagram of Handley Pyge marred by a signwriter s error 16 On 24 December 1952 piloted by Handley Page s chief test pilot Hedley Hazelden WB771 made its maiden flight which lasted for a total of 17 minutes 17 18 Ten days later the Air Ministry announced the aircraft s official name to be Victor 19 N 2 The prototypes performed well however design failings led to the loss of WB771 on 14 July 1954 when the tailplane detached whilst making a low level pass over the runway at Cranfield causing the aircraft to crash with the loss of the crew Attached to the fin using three bolts the tailplane was subjected to considerably more load than had been anticipated causing fatigue cracking around the bolt holes This led to the bolts loosening and failing in shear Stress concentrations around the holes were reduced by adding a fourth bolt 20 The potential for flutter due to shortcomings in the design of the fin tailplane joint was also reduced by shortening the fin 21 22 Additionally the prototypes were tail heavy due to the lack of equipment in the nose this was remedied by adding large ballast weights to the prototypes 23 Production Victors had a lengthened nose to move the crew escape door further from the engine intakes as the original position was considered too dangerous as an emergency exit in flight The lengthened nose also improved the center of gravity range 24 Victor B 1 edit nbsp Victor B1A XH588 at an East Anglian Battle of Britain day event 1959Production B 1 Victors were powered by the Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire ASSa 7 turbojets rated at 11 000 lbf 49 kN and were initially armed with the Blue Danube nuclear weapon and later with the more powerful Yellow Sun weapon when it became available Victors also carried U S owned Mark 5 nuclear bombs made available under the Project E programme and the British Red Beard tactical nuclear weapon 25 26 27 A total of 24 were upgraded to B 1A standard by the addition of Red Steer tail warning radar in an enlarged tail cone and a suite of radar warning receivers and electronic countermeasures ECM from 1958 to 1960 28 29 On 1 June 1956 a production Victor XA917 flown by test pilot Johnny Allam inadvertently exceeded the speed of sound after Allam let the nose drop slightly at a high power setting Allam noticed a cockpit indication of Mach 1 1 and ground observers from Watford to Banbury reported hearing a sonic boom The Victor maintained stability throughout the event Aviation author Andrew Brookes has claimed that Allam broke the sound barrier knowingly to demonstrate the Victor s higher speed capability compared to the earlier V bombers 30 N 3 The Victor was the largest aircraft to have broken the sound barrier at that time 31 Victor B 2 edit nbsp Victor B 2 at RAF Wittering undergoing pre flight preparationsThe RAF required its bombers to be capable of higher operational ceilings and numerous proposals were considered for improved Victors Initially Handley Page proposed using 14 000 lbf 62 kN Sapphire 9 engines to produce a Phase 2 bomber to be followed by Phase 3 Victors with the wingspan increased to 137 ft 42 m and powered by Bristol Siddeley Olympus turbojets or Rolls Royce Conway turbofans The Sapphire 9 was cancelled and the heavily modified Phase 3 aircraft would have delayed introduction so an interim Phase 2A Victor was proposed and accepted to be powered by the Conway but with minimal modifications 32 33 The Phase 2A proposal became the Victor B 2 with Conway RCo 11 engines providing 17 250 lbf 76 7 kN which required enlarged intakes to increase the airflow to the engines and the wingspan was increased to 120 ft 37 m 34 The B 2 also added a pair of retractable elephant ear intakes on the upper rear fuselage forward of the fin to feed air to Ram Air Turbines RAT to provide electricity should an in flight engine failure occur 35 36 The first flight of the Victor B 2 prototype serial number XH668 was made on 20 February 1959 37 and it had flown 100 hours by 20 August 1959 when it disappeared from radar crashing into the sea off the Pembrokeshire coast during high altitude engine tests carried out by the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment A amp AEE Most of the wreckage had been recovered by November 1960 following an extensive search and recovery operation The accident investigation concluded that the starboard pitot head had failed causing the flight control system to force the aircraft into an unrecoverable dive 38 Minor changes resolved the problem 39 allowing the B 2 to enter service in February 1962 40 Further development edit A total of 21 B 2 aircraft were upgraded to the B 2R standard with Conway RCo 17 engines 20 600 lbf or 92 kN thrust and facilities to carry a Blue Steel stand off nuclear missile 41 Anti radar chaff storage had to be relocated from under the nose as a result of the Blue Steel installation Coincidentally Peter White a senior aerodynamicist attended a symposium in Brussels and learned of Whitcomb s conical shaped bodies set on the top of a wing which would add volume while reducing wave drag However the added skin friction drag meant an overall slight drag increase 42 So large streamlined fairings were added to the top of the each wing to hold the chaff The fairings behaved like Kuchemann carrots 43 These were anti shock bodies which reduced wave drag at transonic speeds see area rule 44 Handley Page proposed to build a further refined Phase 6 Victor with more fuel and capable of carrying up to four Skybolt AGM 48 ballistic missiles on standing airborne patrols but this proposal was rejected although it was agreed that some of the Victor B 2s on order would be fitted to carry two Skybolts This plan was abandoned when the U S cancelled the Skybolt programme in 1963 45 With the move to low level penetration missions the Victors were fitted with air to air refuelling probes above the cockpit and received large underwing fuel tanks 46 Nine B 2 aircraft were converted for strategic reconnaissance purposes to replace Valiants which had been withdrawn due to wing fatigue with delivery beginning in July 1965 25 These aircraft received a variety of cameras a bomb bay mounted radar mapping system and air sampling equipment to detect particles released from nuclear testing 28 Designated Victor SR 2 a single aircraft could photograph the whole of the United Kingdom in a single two hour sortie dubious discuss Different camera configurations could be installed in the bomb bay including up to four F49 survey cameras and up to eight F96 cameras could be fitted to take vertical or oblique daylight photography nighttime photography required the fitting of F89 cameras 47 Aerial refuelling conversion edit nbsp Victor K 2 of No 55 Squadron RAF in 1985 note the deployed refuelling drogues Prior to the demise of the Valiant as a tanker a trial installation of refuelling equipment was carried out using the Victor including overload bomb bay tanks underwing tanks refuelling probe and jettisonable de Havilland Spectre Assisted Take Off units The aircraft involved in the trials B 1 XA930 carried out successful trials at Boscombe Down at very high all up weights with relatively short field length take offs 48 With the withdrawal of the Valiant because of metal fatigue in December 1964 the RAF had no flight refuelling capability so the B 1 1A aircraft by then surplus in the strategic bomber role were refitted for this duty To get some tankers into service as quickly as possible six B 1A aircraft were converted to B K 1A standard later redesignated B 1A K2P 49 receiving a two point system with a hose and drogue carried under each wing while the bomb bay remained available for weapons Handley Page worked day and night to convert these six aircraft with the first being delivered on 28 April 1965 and 55 Squadron becoming operational in the tanker role in August 1965 50 While these six aircraft provided a limited tanker capability suitable for refuelling fighters the Mk 20A wing hosereels delivered fuel at too low a rate to be suitable for refuelling bombers Work therefore continued to produce a definitive three point tanker conversion of the Victor Mk 1 Fourteen further B 1A and 11 B 1 were fitted with two permanently fitted fuel tanks in the bomb bay and a high capacity Mk 17 centreline hose dispenser unit with three times the fuel flow rate as the wing reels and were designated K 1A and K 1 respectively 50 The remaining B 2 aircraft were not as suited to the low level mission profile that the RAF had adopted for carrying out strategic bombing missions as the Vulcan with its stronger delta wing 51 This combined with the switch of the nuclear deterrent from the RAF to the Royal Navy with the Polaris missile meant that the Victors were declared surplus to requirements 28 Hence 24 B 2 were modified to K 2 standard Similar to the K 1 1A conversions the wing which was to have been fitted with tip fuel tanks to reduce wing fatigue had 18 inches removed from each tip instead and the bomb aimer s nose glazing was replaced with metal During 1982 the glazing was reintroduced on some aircraft the former nose bomb aimer s position having been used to mount F95 cameras in order to perform reconnaissance missions during the Falklands War 52 The K 2 could carry 91 000 lb 41 000 kg of fuel It served in the tanker role until withdrawn in October 1993 28 Design editOverview edit nbsp Head on view of a Victor during a ground taxi run 2006The Victor was a futuristic looking streamlined aircraft with four turbojet later turbofan engines buried in the thick wing roots Distinguishing features of the Victor were its highly swept T tail with considerable dihedral on the tail planes and a prominent chin bulge that contained the targeting radar nose landing gear unit and an auxiliary bomb aimer s position 53 It was originally required by the specification that the whole nose section could be detached at high altitudes to act as an escape pod but the Air Ministry abandoned this requirement in 1950 54 55 The Victor had a five man crew comprising the two pilots seated side by side and three rearward facing crew these being the navigator plotter the navigator radar operator and the air electronics officer AEO 56 The Victor s pilots sat at the same level as the rest of the crew due to a large pressurised compartment that extended all the way to the nose 53 As with the other V bombers only the pilots were provided with ejection seats the three systems operators relying on explosive cushions inflated by a CO2 bottle that would help them from their seats but despite this escape for them would have still been very unlikely in most emergency situations 57 58 N 4 While assigned to the nuclear delivery role the Victor was finished in an all over anti flash white colour scheme designed to protect the aircraft against the damaging effects of a nuclear detonation The white colour scheme was intended to reflect heat away from the aircraft paler variations of RAF s roundels were also applied for this same reason When the V bombers were assigned to the low level approach profile in the 1960s the Victors were soon repainted in green grey tactical camouflage to reduce visibility to ground observation the same scheme was applied to subsequently converted tanker aircraft 60 Armaments and equipment edit nbsp Victor landing at RNAS Yeovilton 1984 note airbrakes extended The Victor s bomb bay was much larger than that of the Valiant and Vulcan which allowed heavier weapon loads to be carried at the cost of range As an alternative to the single 10 000 lb nuclear bomb as required by the specification the bomb bay was designed to carry several conventional armaments including a single 22 000 lb 10 000 kg Grand Slam or two 12 000 lb 5 400 kg Tallboy earthquake bombs up to forty eight 1 000 lb 450 kg bombs N 5 or thirty nine 2 000 lb 910 kg sea mines One proposed addition to the Victor were underwing panniers capable of carrying a further 28 1 000 lb bombs to supplement the main bomb bay but this option was not pursued 61 In addition to a range of free fall nuclear bombs later Victor B 2s operated as missile carriers for standoff nuclear missiles such as Blue Steel 62 Target information for Blue Steel could be input during flight as well in advance of the mission It was reported that with intensive work a B 2 missile carrier could revert to carrying free fall nuclear weapons or conventional munitions within 30 hours 63 Like the other two V Bombers the Victor made use of the Navigational and Bombing System NBS a little used optical sight had also been installed upon early aircraft 64 For navigation and bomb aiming purposes the Victor employed several radar systems These included the H2S radar developed from the first airborne ground scanning radar and the Green Satin radar 65 Radar information was inputted into the onboard electromechanical analogue bomb aiming apparatus Some of the navigation and targeting equipment was either directly descended from or shared concepts with those used on Handley Page s preceding Halifax bomber Operationally the accuracy of the bomb aiming system proved to be limited to roughly 400 yards which was deemed sufficient for high level nuclear strike operations 66 Avionics and systems edit The Victor had fully powered flying controls for the ailerons elevators and rudder with no manual reversion which therefore required duplication as back up Since the control surfaces were fully powered an artificial feel unit was provided fed by ram air from the pitot in the nose Pilot control movements were transmitted via a low friction mechanical system to the flying control units Duplication was provided on the premise that the single pilot s input would remain functional and that neither hydraulic motors nor screwjack on a unit would jam A separate hydraulic circuit was used for each of the following landing gear flaps nose flaps air brakes bomb doors wheel brakes nose wheel steering ram air turbine air scoops 36 An AC electrical system and auxiliary power unit were significant additions to the later Victor B 2 electrical reliability being noticeably improved 67 N 6 To evade enemy detection and interception efforts the Victor was outfitted with an extensive ECM suite which were operated by the air electronics officer AEO who had primary responsibility for the aircraft s electronics and communication systems The ECM equipment could be employed to disrupt effective use of both active and passive radar in the vicinity of the aircraft and to provide situational awareness for the crew Enemy communications could also be jammed and radar guided missiles of the era were also reportedly rendered ineffective 69 The Victor B 2 featured an extended area located around the base of the tail fin which contained cooling systems and some of the ECM equipment 70 Some of the ECM equipment which initially saw use on the Victor such as the original chaff dispenser and Orange Putter tail warning radar had been developed for the earlier English Electric Canberra bomber and was already considered to be near obsolete by the time the Victor had entered service 71 Significant improvements and alterations would be made to the avionics and ECM suites as effective ECMs had been deemed critical to the Victor s role for example the introduction of the more capable Red Steer tail warning radar 72 The introduction of the Victor B 2 was accompanied by several new ECM systems including a passive radar warning receiver a metric radar jammer and communications jamming equipment Streamlined fairings on the trailing edges of the wings that could house large quantities of defensive chaff flares were also new additions 73 While trials were conducted with terrain following radar and a side scan mode for the bombing and navigation radar neither of these functions were integrated into the operational fleet 28 Engines edit nbsp Rolls Royce Conway RCo 17 Mk 201 on static displayThe Victor B 1 was powered by four Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire turbojet engines The engines were embedded in pairs in the wing roots Because of the mid wing position the tail was mounted at the tip of the fin to keep clear of the jet efflux 74 Sapphire engines installed in the Victor suffered centre line closure failures flying in dense cloud or heavy rain flying in the tropics 64 75 The Victor B 2 was powered by the newer Rolls Royce Conway turbofan which at one point was the most powerful non afterburning engine outside the Soviet Union The Conway had significantly higher thrust than the Sapphire engine in the B 1 76 The Victor B 2 had a Blackburn Artouste auxiliary power unit AAPU installed in the starboard wing root It provided high pressure air for starting the engines and also provided electrical power on the ground or in the air as an emergency power supply if the engine driven generators failed It also reduced the need for some ground support equipment Two turbine driven alternators otherwise known as ram air turbines RATs had been introduced on the B 2 to provide emergency power in the event of electrical power being lost Retractable scoops in the rear fuselage would open to feed ram air to them enabling them to generate sufficient electrical power to operate the flight controls In the event of engine flameout RATs would enable the crew to keep control of the aircraft until the engines could be relit 35 36 Flight profile edit The Victor was commonly described as having good handling and excellent performance along with favourable low speed flight characteristics 77 During the flight tests of the first prototype the Victor proved its aerodynamic performance flying up to Mach 0 98 without handling or buffeting problems there were next to no aerodynamic changes between prototype and production aircraft 78 N 7 Production aircraft featured an automated nose flap operation to counteract a tendency for the aircraft to pitch upwards during low to moderate Mach numbers 80 At low altitude the Victor typically flew in a smooth and comfortable manner in part due to its narrowness and flexibility of the crescent wing 81 One unusual flight characteristic of the early Victor was its self landing capability once lined up with the runway the aircraft would naturally flare as the wing entered into ground effect while the tail continued to sink giving a cushioned landing without any command or intervention by the pilot 29 82 However this characteristic was considered to be of no special advantage according to an assessment of the second prototype by the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment 83 The Victor has been described as an agile aircraft atypical for a large bomber aircraft in 1958 a Victor had performed several loops and a barrel roll during practices for a display flight at Farnborough Airshow 84 85 Manoeuvrability was greatly enabled by the light controls quick response of the aircraft and the design of certain flight surfaces such as the infinitely variable tail mounted airbrake 86 The Victor was designed for flight at high subsonic speeds although multiple instances have occurred in which the sound barrier was broken 87 During development of the Victor B 2 the RAF had stressed the concept of tactical manoeuvrability which led to much effort in development being given to increasing the aircraft s height and range performance 88 Operational history edit nbsp Victor B 1 XA922 on a landing approach circa 1959The Victor was the last of the V bombers to enter service with deliveries of B 1s to No 232 Operational Conversion Unit RAF based at RAF Gaydon Warwickshire taking place in late 1957 89 The first operational bomber squadron 10 Squadron formed at RAF Cottesmore in April 1958 with a second squadron 15 Squadron forming before the end of the year 90 Four Victors fitted with Yellow Astor reconnaissance radar together with passive sensors were used to equip a secretive unit the Radar Reconnaissance Flight at RAF Wyton 89 90 The Victor bomber force continued to build up with 57 Squadron forming in March 1959 and 55 Squadron in October 1960 49 91 At its height the Victor was simultaneously operating with six squadrons of RAF Bomber Command 64 According to the operational doctrine developed by the RAF in the circumstance of deploying a large scale nuclear strike each Victor would have operated entirely independently the crews would conduct their mission without external guidance and be reliant upon the effectiveness of their individual tactics to reach and successfully attack their assigned target thus great emphasis was placed on continuous crew training during peacetime 92 Developing a sense of a crew unity was considered highly important Victor crews would typically serve together for at least five years and a similar approach was adopted with ground personnel 93 In order to maximise the operational lifespan of each aircraft Victor crews typically flew a single five hour training mission per week 94 Each crew member was required to qualify for servicing certificates to independently undertake inspection refuelling and turnaround operations 79 nbsp Victor K2 XH669 refuelling a pair of English Electric Lightnings September 1978In times of high international tension the V bombers would have dispersed and been maintained at a high state of readiness if the order was given to deploy a nuclear strike Victors at high readiness would have been airborne in under four minutes 95 British intelligence had estimated that the Soviets radar network was capable of detecting the Victor at up to 200 miles away so to avoid interception the Victor would follow carefully planned routes to exploit weaknesses in the Soviet detection network This tactic was employed in conjunction with the Victor s extensive onboard ECM to increase the chances of evasion 69 Whilst originally the Victor would have maintained high altitude flight throughout a nuclear strike mission rapid advances of the Soviet anti aircraft warfare capabilities exemplified by the downing of a U 2 from 70 000 ft in 1960 led to this tactic being abandoned a low level high speed approach supported by increasingly sophisticated ECMs was adopted in its place 96 97 The improved Victor B 2 started to be delivered in 1961 with the first B 2 Squadron 139 Squadron forming in February 1962 and a second 100 Squadron in May 1962 40 These were the only two bomber squadrons to form on the B 2 as the last 28 Victors on order were cancelled 25 The prospect of Skybolt ballistic missiles with which each V bomber could strike at two separate targets meant that fewer bombers would be needed 98 The government was also unhappy with Sir Frederick Handley Page s resistance to its pressure to merge his company with competitors 99 Following Skybolt s cancellation Victor B 2s were retrofitted as carrier aircraft for the Blue Steel standoff nuclear missile The introduction of standoff weapons and the switch to low level flight in order to evade radar detection were said to be decisive factors in the successful penetration of enemy territory 62 nbsp A Victor and a Vulcan at Richmond Air Show New South Wales 1964In 1964 1965 a series of detachments of Victor B 1As was deployed to RAF Tengah Singapore as a deterrent against Indonesia during the Borneo conflict the detachments fulfilling a strategic deterrent role as part of Far East Air Force while also giving valuable training in low level flight and visual bombing 100 101 In September 1964 with the confrontation with Indonesia reaching a peak the detachment of four Victors was prepared for rapid dispersal with two aircraft loaded with live conventional bombs and held on one hour readiness ready to fly operational sorties However they were never required to fly combat missions and the high readiness alert finished at the end of the month 102 Following the discovery of fatigue cracks developing due to their low altitude usage 99 the B 2R strategic bombers were retired and placed in storage by the end of 1968 The RAF had experienced intense demand on its existing aerial refuelling tanker fleet and its existing fleet of Victor B 1 tankers that had been converted earlier were due to be retired in the 1970s so it was decided that the stored Victor B 2Rs would be converted to tankers also 103 Handley Page prepared a modification scheme that would see the Victors fitted with tip tanks the structure modified to limit further fatigue cracking in the wings and ejection seats provided for all six crewmembers 104 105 The Ministry of Defence delayed signing the order for conversion of the B2s until after Handley Page went into liquidation The contract for conversion was instead awarded to Hawker Siddeley who produced a much simpler conversion proposal with the wingspan shortened to reduce wing bending stress and hence extend airframe life 106 nbsp Victor K2 XL161 approaching RAF Abingdon September 1979While the Victor was never permanently based with any units stationed overseas temporary deployments were frequently conducted often in a ceremonial capacity or to participate in training exercises and competitions Victor squadrons were dispatched on several extended deployments to the Far East and short term deployments to Canada were also conducted for training purposes 107 At one point during the early 1960s South Africa showed considerable interest in the acquisition of several bomber configured Victors 108 Several of the Victor B 2s had been converted for Strategic Reconnaissance missions following the retirement of the Valiant in this capacity In service this type was primarily used in surveillance of the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Seas capable of surveying 400 000 square miles in an eight hour mission they were also used to sample the fallout from French nuclear tests conducted in the South Pacific 109 Originally reconnaissance Victors were equipped for visual reconnaissance it was found to be cheaper to assign Canberra light bombers to this duty and the cameras were removed in 1970 Subsequently radar based reconnaissance was emphasised in the type s role 110 The reconnaissance Victors remained in use until 1974 when they followed the standard bombers into the tanker conversion line a handful of modified Avro Vulcans assumed the maritime radar reconnaissance role in their place 100 Both the Victor and the Vulcan played a high profile role during the 1982 Falklands War In order to cross the distance of the South Atlantic a single Vulcan required refuelling several times from Victor tankers A total of three bombing missions were flown against Argentine forces deployed to the Falklands with approximately 1 1 million gal 5 million L of fuel consumed in each mission 111 112 At the time these missions held the record for the world s longest distance bombing raids 113 The deployment of other assets to the theatre such as the Hawker Siddeley Nimrod and Lockheed Hercules required the support of the Victor tanker fleet which had been temporarily relocated to RAF Ascension Island for the campaign 114 115 The Victor also undertook several reconnaissance missions over the South Atlantic These missions provided valuable intelligence for the retaking of South Georgia by British forces 116 External videos nbsp Documentary on the Black Buck raidsFollowing the invasion of Kuwait by neighbouring Iraq in 1991 a total of eight Victor K 2s were deployed to Bahrain to provide in flight refuelling support to RAF and other coalition aircraft during the subsequent 1991 Gulf War 99 117 RAF strike aircraft such as the Panavia Tornado would frequently make use of the tanker to refuel prior to launching cross border strikes inside Iraq The remaining Victor fleet was retired in 1993 at which point it had been the last of the three V bombers in operational service 118 Variants edit nbsp Ventral plan of a Victor K 2 nbsp 3 view of Victor B 1 nbsp 3 view of Victor B 2HP 80 Prototype two aircraft built 49 Victor B 1 Strategic bomber aircraft 50 built 49 Victor B 1A Strategic bomber aircraft B 1 updated with Red Steer tail warning radar and ECM suite 24 converted 119 Victor B 1A K 2P 2 point in flight refuelling tanker retaining bomber capability six converted 120 Victor BK 1 3 point in flight refuelling tanker renamed K 1 after bombing capability removed 11 converted 120 Victor BK 1A 3 point in flight refuelling tanker renamed K 1A as for K 1 14 converted 120 Victor B 2 Strategic bomber aircraft 34 built 49 Victor B 2RS Blue Steel capable aircraft with RCo 17 Conway 201 engines 21 converted 120 Victor B SR 2 Strategic reconnaissance aircraft nine converted 49 Victor K 2 In flight refuelling tanker 24 converted from B 2 and B SR 2 49 HP 96 Proposed military transport of 1950 with new fuselage carrying 85 troops Unbuilt 121 HP 97 1950 civil airliner project Not built 121 HP 98 Proposed pathfinder version with remotely operated tail guns and powered by Conway engines Rejected in favour of Valiant B 2 122 HP 101 Proposed military transport version of HP 97 Not built 100 HP 104 Proposed Phase 3 bomber of 1955 powered by Bristol Olympus or Sapphire engines Not built 123 HP 111 1958 project for military or civil transport powered by four Conway engines Capacity for 200 troops in military version or 145 passengers in airliner in a double decker fuselage 124 HP 114 Proposed Phase 6 bomber designed for standing patrols carrying two or four GAM 87 Skybolt ballistic missiles 45 HP 123 Proposed military tactical transport based on HP 111 and fitted with blown flaps Rejected in favour of Armstrong Whitworth AW 681 125 Operators edit nbsp Victor B 1A K 2P XH648 preserved at the Imperial War Museum DuxfordRoyal Air Force No 10 Squadron RAF operated B 1 from April 1958 to March 1964 at RAF Cottesmore 49 No 15 Squadron RAF operated B 1 from September 1958 to October 1964 at RAF Cottesmore 49 No 55 Squadron RAF operated B 1 and B 1As from RAF Honington from October 1960 49 moving to RAF Marham and receiving B 1 K A tankers in May 1965 126 These were replaced by K 2 in July 1975 127 with the squadron continuing to operate Victors in the tanker role until disbanding in October 1993 49 No 57 Squadron RAF operated B 1As from RAF Honington from March 1959 moving to RAF Marham in December 1965 for conversion to K 1 and later K 2 tankers until disbanding in June 1986 49 128 No 100 Squadron RAF operated B 2s at RAF Wittering from May 1962 to September 1968 49 No 139 Jamaica Squadron RAF operated B 2s from RAF Wittering from February 1962 to December 1968 49 No 214 Squadron RAF operated K 1 tankers from RAF Marham from July 1966 to January 1977 49 No 543 Squadron RAF operated B SR 2s from RAF Wyton from December 1965 to May 1974 49 No 232 Operational Conversion Unit RAF 49 Radar Reconnaissance Flight RAF Wyton 89 Accidents and incidents edit14 July 1954 WB771 the prototype HP 80 crashed during a test flight at Cranfield England All four crewmen died The tailplane detached from the top of the fin 129 16 April 1958 XA921 a B 1 undertaking Ministry of Supply trials experienced a collapse of the rear bomb bay bulkhead while cycling the bomb bay doors damaging hydraulic and electrical systems the aircraft successfully returned to base Following the incident in service Victors had restrictions put in place on the opening of the bomb doors until Modification 943 was applied to all aircraft 130 20 August 1959 XH668 a B2 of the A amp AEE lost a pitot head and dived into the sea off Milford Haven Pembrokeshire 131 More than 40 ships and 4 000 people were involved in the recovery of 600 000 pieces of the missing bomber an exercise referred to as Operation Victor Search 132 19 June 1960 XH617 a B1A of 57 Squadron caught fire in the air and was abandoned near Diss Norfolk 131 23 March 1962 XL159 a B2 of the A amp AEE stalled and dived into a house at Stubton Lincolnshire 133 14 June 1962 XH613 a B1A of 15 Squadron lost power on all engines and was abandoned on approach to RAF Cottesmore 131 16 June 1962 XA929 a B1 of 10 Squadron overshot the runway and broke up at RAF Akrotiri following an aborted takeoff 134 2 October 1962 XA934 a B1 of A Squadron 232 OCU had an engine failure and deliberate shutdown of the adjacent engine on takeoff from RAF Gaydon During the approach to land the other two engines flamed out 134 The aircraft crashed into a copse several miles from RAF Gaydon Of the four crew on board only the co pilot survived The RAF accident record states the prime cause as mis management of the fuel system and consequent fuel starvation of the two running engines 20 March 1963 XM714 a B2 of 100 Squadron stalled after takeoff from RAF Wittering 135 29 June 1966 XM716 a SR2 of 543 Squadron was giving a demonstration flight for the press and television at RAF Wyton 136 The aircraft had made one high speed circuit and was flying low in a wide arc to return over the airfield when the starboard wing was seen to break away and both it and the rest of the aircraft burst into flames 136 All four crew were killed 136 The aircraft was the first SR2 to enter service with the squadron The aircraft had exceeded its operational limitations causing overstressing 137 138 19 August 1968 Victor K1 XH646 of 214 Squadron collided in midair near Holt Norfolk in bad weather with a 213 Squadron English Electric Canberra WT325 all four crew members of the Victor died as did all three on board the Canberra 131 139 140 10 May 1973 XL230 a SR2 of 543 Squadron bounced during landing at RAF Wyton and exploded 133 24 March 1975 Victor K1A XH618 of 57 Squadron was involved in a midair collision with Blackburn Buccaneer XV156 during a simulated refuelling The Buccaneer hit the Victor s tailplane causing the Victor to crash into the sea 95 mi 153 km east of Sunderland Tyne and Wear four crew killed 131 137 29 Sept 1976 XL513 a K2 of No 55 Squadron aborted take off and overshot the runway at RAF Marham after a bird strike The crew escaped with no serious injuries The aircraft caught fire and was damaged beyond repair 141 15 October 1982 XL232 a K2 of No 55 Squadron suffered an uncontained turbine failure early in the take off run The aircraft was stopped and the crew evacuated the aircraft with no injuries Debris from the turbine penetrated a fuselage fuel tank starting an uncontrolled fire destroying the aircraft and damaging the runway at RAF Marham 142 19 June 1986 XL191 a K2 of 57 Squadron undershot approach at Hamilton Ontario 133 29 February 1988 Landing accident at USAF Offutt AB hydraulic failure resulted in the aircraft running off the runway As recorded and illustrated in Flypast October 2008 p 107 this resulted in I Ran Offut artwork being applied to the crew door Many of the USAF groundcrew at Offutt were Irish American so the tongue in cheek phrase is meant to be said in an Irish accent I ran off it 3 May 2009 During a fast taxi run at Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome XM715 Teasin Tina made a brief unplanned flight reaching a height of about 30 ft 9 m at maximum then carrying out a safe landing before the aircraft could reach the runway threshold The aircraft did not have a permit to fly however the Civil Aviation Authority CAA stated that they would not be conducting an investigation 143 Teasin Tina became airborne after the plane s co pilot had failed to reply to the command throttles back the pilot then had to control the throttles himself the confusion temporarily disrupting firm control of the aircraft 144 145 Surviving aircraft edit nbsp Victor XL231 Lusty Lindy 2011 nbsp Victor XM715 Teasin Tina 2008 A total of four Victors have survived and are on display in the United Kingdom None are flightworthy 146 Victor B 1A XH648 a B 1A K 2P at the Imperial War Museum Duxford Cambridgeshire This is the sole B 1 to survive 147 This aircraft is on display following a five year restoration project Victor K 2 XH672 Maid Marian at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford Shropshire in the National Cold War Exhibition 148 Victor K 2 XL231 Lusty Lindy at the Yorkshire Air Museum York The prototype for the B 2 to K 2 conversion 149 Victor K 2 XM715 Teasin Tina Victor Meldrew at the British Aviation Heritage Centre Bruntingthorpe Leicestershire 150 XM715 during a fast taxi demonstration inadvertently left the ground briefly at Bruntingthorpe Aerodrome in 2009 A fifth airframe Victor K 2 XH673 A K 2 served as Gate guardian at RAF Marham when retired in 1993 but in early 2020 she was offered up for disposal with the word being that she was in a structurally unsafe condition In spite of preservation attempts as of December 2020 most of the airframe had been scrapped 151 In February 2021 the RAF released the time lapse footage of this airframe being dismantled 152 Specifications Handley Page Victor B 1 edit nbsp 3 view of VictorData from Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 125 General characteristicsCrew 5 Length 114 ft 11 in 35 03 m Wingspan 110 ft 34 m Height 28 ft 1 5 in 8 573 m 49 Wing area 2 406 sq ft 223 5 m2 Airfoil Root 16 Modified RAE Airfoil Tip 6 Modified RAE Airfoil 153 Empty weight 89 030 lb 40 383 kg 154 Max takeoff weight 205 000 lb 92 986 kg Powerplant 4 Armstrong Siddeley A S Sa 7 Sapphire turbojet engines 11 050 lbf 49 2 kN thrust eachPerformance Maximum speed 545 kn 627 mph 1 009 km h at 36 000 ft 11 000 m 49 Range 5 217 nmi 6 004 mi 9 662 km Service ceiling 56 000 ft 17 000 m Armament Bombs Up to 35 1 000 lb 450 kg bombs or 1 Yellow Sun free fall nuclear bombNotable appearances in media editMain article Handley Page Victor in fiction A 1964 Gerhard Richter painting titled XL 513 depicts Victor K 2 which was lost in a 1976 accident at RAF Marham 155 See also edit nbsp UK portal nbsp Aviation portalRelated development Handley Page HP 88 British research aircraftAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Avro Vulcan Boeing B 47 Stratojet Short Sperrin Tupolev Tu 16 Xian H 6 Vickers ValiantRelated lists List of aircraft of the Royal Air Force List of V Bomber dispersal basesReferences editNotes edit Frederick Handley Page the founder and owner of Handley Page had anticipated that there would be a need to replace the Lincoln bomber well in advance of any requirement having issued a memo on 14 June 1945 requesting the immediate investigation of two new bomber designs 3 According to aviation author Jon Lake the name Victor had originated from British Prime Minister Winston Churchill 12 Paul Langston an observer on board while XA917 broke the sound barrier has the distinction of being the first man to break the sound barrier seated backwards 30 Martin Baker developed and tested rearward ejection systems for both the Valiant and the Vulcan proceeding to the point of a modified Valiant undergoing testing however the company concluded that the same approach on the Victor would be substantially more difficult due to structural reasons 59 In operational service with the RAF a maximum payload of 35 1 000 lb bombs could be carried 49 Godfrey Lee one of the aircraft s designers stated of the electrical changes that an unbelievable improvement followed from going over from DC to AC 68 Hedley Hazelden Handley Page s chief test pilot stated that From a pilot s point of view the Victor wasn t that much of a problem In spite of innovations such as powered controls and nose flaps it flew like any other aeroplane 79 Citations edit Wynn 1997 pp 7 16 Wynn 1997 p 18 Brookes 2011 p 6 a b Buttler Air Enthusiast January February 1999 pp 28 31 Wynn 1997 pp 44 46 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 7 Brookes 2011 pp 6 7 a b Gunston 1973 p 80 Lee G H Aerodynamics of the Crescent Wing Flight 14 May 1954 pp 611 612 Flight 30 October 1959 p 463 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 9 a b Lake 2002 p 364 Buttler Air Enthusiast January February 1999 pp 38 39 Donald 2008 pp 127 128 The Handley Page Victor The History amp Development Of A Classic Jet Volume One Roger R Brooks ISBN 978 1 84415 411 1 p 54 Barnes 1976 p 502 Barnes 1976 p 503 This British Bomber Leads The World The Age 15 January 1953 p 2 Brookes 2011 p 9 Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 1 2007 p 114 Barnes 1976 p 506 Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 p 61 Darling 2012 p 49 Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 pp 61 62 a b c Mason 1994 p 388 Brookes 2011 p 29 Leitch Air Enthusiast September October 2003 pp 55 58 a b c d e Handley page Victor K 2 Gatwick Aviation Museum Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 12 April 2011 a b Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 p 63 a b Brookes 2011 p 10 Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 p 62 Barnes 1976 pp 509 511 Darling 2012 p 50 ap Rees Air Pictorial June 1972 p 220 a b Fraser Mitchell 2009 pp 86 87 a b c Flight 30 October 1959 p 472 Barnes 1976 p 514 Middleton Air Enthusiast Winter 1993 pp 70 71 Barnes 1976 p 516 a b Barnes 1976 pp 519 520 Mason 1994 pp 388 389 Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 2 2007 p 190 Gunston 1973 p 101 ap Rees Air Pictorial June 1972 p 222 a b Barnes 1976 p 518 Rodwell Flight 13 February 1964 p 241 Darling 2012 pp 52 53 Barnes 1976 p P 513 514 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Mason 1994 p 389 a b Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 pp 64 65 Darling 2012 p 53 Darling 2012 pp 162 163 a b Flight 19 September 1958 p 495 ap Rees Air Pictorial May 1972 p 166 Gunston Aeroplane Monthly January 1981 pp 6 7 Flight 19 September 1958 pp 494 495 Gunston Aeroplane Monthly January 1981 p 9 The V Bomber Ejector Seat Story BBC Retrieved 27 September 2010 Hamilton Paterson 2010 p 156 Butler and Buttler 2009 pp 38 39 Barnes 1976 p 508 a b Rodwell Flight 13 February 1964 pp 241 242 Rodwell Flight 13 February 1964 p 245 a b c Butler and Buttler 2009 p 61 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 40 Brookes 2011 p 21 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 44 Brookes 2011 p 13 a b Brookes 2011 p 24 Barnes 1976 p 519 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 39 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 39 40 Butler and Buttler 2009 pp 44 47 Flight 30 October 1959 pp 463 465 Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 2 2007 p 282 Flight 30 October 1959 pp 463 466 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 60 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 31 a b Brookes 2011 p 18 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 33 Hamilton Paterson 2010 p 112 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 29 Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 1 2007 p 124 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 35 Farnborough Week The most Memorable S B A C Display Yet Flight International 12 September 1958 pp 438 442 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 32 Butler and Buttler 2009 pp 33 34 Butler and Buttler 2009 pp 60 61 a b c Mason 1994 p 387 a b Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 pp 62 63 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 63 Flight 19 September 1958 p 493 Flight 19 September 1958 pp 493 495 Flight 19 September 1958 p 494 Brookes 2011 pp 23 24 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 49 Windle and Bowman 2009 p 21 Barnes 1976 pp 518 519 a b c Lake 2002 p 369 a b c Barnes 1976 p 527 Rodwell Flight 6 May 1965 p 703 Brookes 2011 p 65 Darling 2012 pp 110 111 Barnes 1976 p 526 Fraser Mitchell 2009 pp 88 89 Fraser Mitchell 2009 pp 90 91 Butler and Buttler 2009 pp 72 75 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 75 Butler and Buttler 2009 p 72 Brookes 2011 p 69 The Falkland Islands A history of the 1982 conflict Royal Air Force 29 April 2010 Operation Black Buck Archived 14 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Royal Air Force Retrieved 20 April 2014 Bull 2004 p 84 Thompson Julian Falklands Conflict Gallery BBC June 2007 Narrative of RAF Contribution to the Falklands Campaign The National Archives Retrieved 20 April 2014 Darling 2012 pp 162 165 RAF Aircraft in Operation Granby Archived 11 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Royal Air Force Retrieved 20 April 2014 Brookes 2011 pp 90 91 Brookes and Davy 2011 pp 14 15 a b c d Handley Page Victor K2 Royal Air Force Museum 2010 Retrieved 12 April 2011 a b Barnes 1976 p 498 Barnes 1976 p 501 Barnes 1976 p 605 Barnes 1976 pp 527 529 a b Barnes 1976 p 529 Gunston Aeroplane Monthly February 1981 p 65 Ashworth 1989 p 131 Brookes 2011 pp 75 92 The Determination of the Flutter Speed of a T tail Unit by Calculations Model Tests and Flight Flutter Tests Baldock October 1958 AGARD Report 221 para 2 6 Darling 2012 p 55 a b c d e Halley 2001 p 42 McCracken Niall 23 July 2023 Operation Victor search A missing military plane and the Mourne fishermen BBC Retrieved 23 July 2023 a b c Halley 2001 p 54 a b Halley 2001 p 9 Halley 2001 p 64 a b c A Victor 2 Falls in Flames Four killed in display run The Times Issue 56671 30 June 1966 p 1 Column G a b Handley Page Victor Ejection History Retrieved 12 April 2011 Brooks The Handley Page Victor Volume 2 2007 p 268 Barnes 1976 p 525 UK Military Aircraft Losses 1968 ukserials com Wolverhampton Aviation Group Retrieved 19 April 2011 ASN Wikibase Occurrence 55300 retrieved 22 August 2015 ASN Wikibase Occurrence 55299 Pictures Victor bomber accidentally becomes airborne during taxi demo Flight International 9 September 2009 Retrieved 24 July 2010 Probe into unauthorised Victor flight Archived 26 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Leicester Mercury 9 September 2009 Retrieved 24 July 2010 Victor test flight YouTube video Retrieved 25 July 2010 Concorde will never fly again says Vulcan restoration expert Institute of Mechanical Engineers 28 June 2013 Handley Page Victor Imperial War Museum Duxford via The National Archive Retrieved 20 April 2014 Simpson Andrew Individual History Handley Page Victor K 2 XH672 9242M Museum Accession Number 1995 1001 A Royal Air Force Museum Cosford Retrieved 12 April 2011 The Victor Association XL 231 Lindy Updates The Victor Association Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 12 April 2011 Thunder amp Lightnings 25 May 2010 Survivor XM715 Thunder amp Lightnings Retrieved 12 April 2011 Thunder amp Lightnings 2 December 2020 XH673 Scrapped Thunder amp Lightnings Retrieved 20 December 2020 How to dismantle an RAF bomber BBC News Retrieved 17 February 2021 Lednicer David 15 September 2010 The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage UIUC Applied Aerodynamics Group Retrieved 16 April 2019 Fraser Mitchell 2009 p 86 XL 513 documenta 9 Exhibitions Gerhard Richter retrieved 22 August 2015 Bibliography edit ap Rees Elfan Handley Page Victor Part 1 Air Pictorial May 1972 Vol 34 No 5 pp 162 167 ap Rees Elfan Handley Page Victor Part 2 Air Pictorial June 1972 Vol 34 No 6 pp 220 226 Ashworth Chris Encyclopaedia of Modern Royal Air Force Squadrons Wellingborough UK Patrick Stephens Limited 1989 ISBN 1 85260 013 6 Barnes C H Handley Page Aircraft since 1907 London Putnam 1976 ISBN 0 370 00030 7 Bull Stephen Encyclopedia of Military Technology And Innovation Santa Barbara California Greenwood Publishing Group 2004 ISBN 978 1 57356 557 8 Butler Phil and Tony Buttler Aerofax Handley Page Victor Midland Publishing 2009 ISBN 1 85780 311 6 Buttler Tony Vital Bombers Origins of the RAF s V Bomber Force Air Enthusiast No 79 January February 1999 pp 28 41 ISSN 0143 5450 Brookes Andrew Victor Units of the Cold War Osprey Publishing 2011 ISBN 1 84908 339 8 Brooks Roger R The Handley Page Victor The History amp Development of a Classic Jet Volume 1 The HP80 Prototype amp The Mark I Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword Aviation 2007 ISBN 978 1 84415 411 1 Brooks Roger R The Handley Page Victor The History amp Development of a Classic Jet Volume 2 The Mark 2 and Comprehensive Appendices and Accident Analysis for all Marks Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword Aviation 2007 ISBN 978 1 84415 570 5 Darling Kev RAF Strike Command 1968 2007 Aircraft Men and Action Casemate Publishers 2012 ISBN 1 84884 898 6 Donald David Warplane Classic Handley Page Victor International Airpower Review Issue 25 2008 pp 124 153 Westport CT AIRtime Publishing ISSN 1473 9917 Fraser Mitchell Harry Database Handley Page Victor Aeroplane Vol 37 No 7 July 2009 pp 73 94 ISSN 0143 7240 Gunston Bill Bombers of the West London Ian Allan 1973 pp 78 102 ISBN 0 7110 0456 0 Gardner Brian Spring 1994 Talkback Air Enthusiast No 53 pp 78 79 ISSN 0143 5450 Gunston Bill The V Bombers Handley Page Victor Part 1 Aeroplane Monthly Vol 9 No 1 January 1981 pp 4 9 ISSN 0143 7240 Gunston Bill The V Bombers Handley Page Victor Part 2 Aeroplane Monthly Vol 9 No 2 February 1981 pp 60 65 ISSN 0143 7240 Gunston Bill The V Bombers Handley Page Victor Part 3 Aeroplane Monthly Vol 9 No 3 March 1981 pp 136 139 142 146 ISSN 0143 7240 Halley James Royal Air Force Aircraft XA100 to XZ999 Tonbridge Kent UK Air Britain Historians Ltd 2001 ISBN 0 85130 311 0 Hamilton Paterson James Empire of the Clouds When Britain s Aircraft Ruled the World Faber amp Faber 2010 ISBN 0 57127 173 1 Lake Jon The Great Book of Bombers The World s Most Important Bombers from World War I to the Present Day Zenith Imprint 2002 ISBN 0 7603 1347 4 Leich Andy V Force Nuclear Arsenal Weapons for the Valiant Victor and Vulcan Air Enthusiast No 107 September October 2003 pp 52 59 ISSN 0143 5450 Mason Francis K The British Bomber since 1914 London Putnam 1994 ISBN 0 85177 861 5 Middleton Don Testing the Victor Air Enthusiast Fifty Two Winter 1993 pp 60 75 ISSN 0143 5450 Parade of Victors No 10 Squadron at RAF Cottesmore Flight 19 September 1958 pp 493 496 Rodwell Robert R Lo Hi Victor Mixed Mission over Malaya Flight 6 May 1965 pp 700 703 Rodwell Robert R The Steel in the Blue Last Week s Glimpse of the V force Flight 13 February 1964 pp 241 245 Victor A Technical Description of Britain s Latest V Bomber Flight 30 October 1959 pp 463 472 Windle Dave and Martin Bowman V Bombers Vulcan Valiant and Victor Casemate Publishers 2009 ISBN 1 84415 827 6 Wynn Humphrey RAF Strategic Nuclear Deterrent Forces Origins Roles and Deployment 1946 1969 London The Stationery Office 1997 ISBN 0 11 772833 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Handley Page Victor Victor information from Thunder and Lightnings The Handley Page Victor at Greg Goebel s In The Public Domain Nuclear weapon drop methods including from a Victor RAF gallery of Victor nose art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Handley Page Victor amp oldid 1187490902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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